In the first half of the sixteenth century Gabriele Vendramin was a notable patron of artists and the owner of one of the most significant collections in Venice.
Sebastiano Serlio saluted him in print as an authority on ancient Roman buildings and the work of
Vitruvius. He was painted with his brother Andrea and Andrea's seven sons in
Titian's
Portrait of the Vendramin Family in the 1540s (
illustration). Though he married Maria
Grimani in 1538, and had seven daughters, none of the women of the Vendramin house appeared in the group portrait. The Vendramin collection was one of the marvels of Venice noted in print by
Jacopo Sansovino in his
Descrizione di Venezia, 1581. Tantalising glimpses of Gabriele's collection as it was displayed in 1530 in the
Camerino, or "little study", of Palazzo Vendramin in Santa Fosca feature in the writings of
Marcantonio Michiel, who left important descriptions of many of the
patrician collections of Venice. He commissioned
The Tempest from
Giorgione, and also had his portrait and
The Education of Marcus Aurelius by the same artist, both now lost. Among several bound albums of drawings, he owned the large album by
Jacopo Bellini now in the
British Museum; there was also an important collection of
prints. Contemporary observers were more impressed with Gabriele's classical statues and his collection of ancient coins than his paintings. After Gabriele Vendramin's death in 1552, the collection passed to the three sons of his brother, Andrea, with the stipulation that it remain intact. The high-living heirs came to a lawsuit over the collection, when agents of
Albrecht V of Bavaria, led by
Jacopo Strada, were negotiating over acquiring it
in toto. the brothers mutually blocked the sale. With the death of the eldest, Luca, in December 1601, occasioning a second inventory, the collection began to be dispersed by the Vendramin heirs in the next generation. The important paintings in the collection when it was in the hands of a younger Andrea Vendramin (c. 1565-1629) in 1627 were documented in an album of pen-and-ink drawings before they were purchased in Venice after his death by the Dutch merchant and connoisseur
Jan Reynst and passed to the
Reynst Collection in
Amsterdam in the seventeenth century; at least one of his Italian paintings was among those presented to
Charles II of England in 1660, as part of the diplomatic gesture called the "
Dutch Gift". Other works included the so-called
Self-Portrait as David with the head of Goliath ascribed to Giorgione, now in Vienna, another lost painting attributed to Giorgione, the
Allegory of Wealth, sold in the Netherlands to the Elector of Brandenburg (by
Hendrick van Uylenburgh), and a
Giovanni Bellini now in Washington. The paintings filled only one of the volumes of Latin text. Andrea Vendramin's
cabinet of curiosities at San Gregorio was described in three further illustrated volumes, also at the British Library; signet rings, seals and
scarabs and
carved gems filled a second, while curiosities of natural history and gems and minerals filled two more. ==Palazzi==