Marcantonio Michiel

Marcantonio Michiel (1484–1552)[1] was a Venetian noble from a family prominent in the service of the state who was interested in matters of art.

His notes on the contemporary art collections of Venice, Padua, Milan and other northern Italian centres (Notizie d'opere del disegno), written sporadically between 1521 and 1543[2] and preserved in the Biblioteca Marciana, provide a major primary source for art historians[3] and a less thoroughly inspected source for historians of décor.

Iconography was his weak point: though his Latin was excellent, his knowledge of the Bible was desultory, and Jennifer Fletcher notes that no one ever took particular notice of his piety.

[5] In his youth he followed his father to Bergamo when the elder Michiel was appointed Capitano, and he spent two years in Rome at the court of Pope Leo X, as a member of the familia of Cardinal Pisani.

His peers apparently did not want to entrust him with ambassadorial duties in spite of his rank and connections, and it is as a collector and connoisseur, that he is remembered.

Marcantonio Michiel Museo Correr
Mercury , with auspicious horoscope, commissioned by Michiel from Antonio Minelli, 1527 ( Victoria and Albert Museum )