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118 articles
Exhibition Review
Botticelli Drawings
02/2024 | 1451 | 166
Pages: 188–190
related names
Reviewer:
Nethersole, Scott (Nethersole, Scott)
Subjects
dates:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Botticelli Drawings Legion of Honor, San Francisco 19th November 2023–11th February 2024 | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
11. Study for a portrait of a woman, by Botticelli. c.1480. Metalpoint heightened with white, 34 by 23 cm. (Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; exh. Legion of Honor, San Francisco).
Attributed works:
12. Study for a standing man or St Sebastian, by Botticelli. c.1473. Metalpoint heightened with white, 18.4 by 9.3 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris; exh. Legion of Honor, San Francisco).
Attributed works:
13. Head of a youth looking up, by Botticelli. c.1465–68. Metalpoint heightened with white, 16.7 by 13.5 cm. (Kupferstichkabinett, Dresden; exh. Legion of Honor, San Francisco).
Book Review
Botticelli’s Secret: The Lost Drawings and the Rediscovery of the Renaissance
01/2024 | 1450 | 166
Pages: 94–96
related names
Reviewer:
Evans, Mark (Evans, Mark)
Subjects
Reviewed Items
works:
Botticelli’s Secret: The Lost Drawings and the Rediscovery of the Renaissance By Joseph Luzzi. 352 pp. incl. 19 col. ills. (W.W. Norton & Co., New York, 2022), $28.95. ISBN 978–1–324–00401–1. | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
3. The giants, an illustration for Dante’s Inferno, canto XXXI, by Sandro Botticelli. 1490s. Metalpoint and ink on vellum, 32.4 by 42.7 cm. (Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin).
Advertisements
Advertisements (front)
11/2023 | 1448 | 165
Pages: i-xxvii
Subjects
advertisements:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
A dalmatian hound (possibly owned by the Medici family), by Pandolfo Reschi (1640–96). Oil on canvas, 74.5 by 97 cm. [GALERIE ENRICO FRASCIONE, FLORENCE Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Andrea di Bartolo, Saint Benedict, Sienna, 14th Century £20,000-£40,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
ANTOINE-LAURENT DANTAN (Saint-Cloud, 1798 – Paris, 1878) Presumed self-portrait White marble H : 64.5 cm; L : 49 cm; D : 30 cm Signed and dated on the right side : DANTAN aîné 1850 [Charles Ratton & Guy Ladrière]
Attributed works:
Attributed to Anthonis Mor (Utrecht 1516/1521 – Antwerp 1576) Portrait of a humanist Oil on panel, 62.5 x 42.5 cm PROVENANCE: Probably in the collection of Archduke Léopold Wilhelm, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands 1647–1656 [Jacques Leegenhoek]
Attributed works:
Charles Hoyau (d. 1644) Active in Le Mans, France Angel Terracotta with original paint and gilding Circa 1630 73 cm high [Daniel Katz Gallery]
Attributed works:
Circle of Lorenzo Monaco, The Prophet Jeremiah £70,000-£100,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
Desiderio da Settignano Umkreis, € 150,000 - 300,000 [Kinsky]
Attributed works:
Domenico Corvi (Viterbo 1721–Rome 1803) The Liberation of the Apostle Peter c. 1770, oil on canvas (detail) 24¾ × 19¼ inches | 63 × 49 cm [Carlo Orsi/Nicholas Hall]
Attributed works:
GEORG PFRÜNDT (1603–1663) GERMAN, SCHWÄBISCH HALL OR NUREMBERG, CIRCA 1625–1635 CAIN AND ABEL Solnhofen stone, 20.5 by 17 cm. [Erik Bizet]
Attributed works:
Giambologna Birdcatcher Cast by Antonio Susini (1558–1624) Florence, c. 1580 Bronze, Height: 31 cm [Stuart Lockhead]
Attributed works:
Gian Maria Falconetto (Veronese, 1468 - 1540), A mythological or historical scene £200,000-£400,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
Giovan Battista Foggini (1652 – Florence – 1725) After a model by Giambologna of 1589 Hercules and the Erymanthian Boar Bronze: h. 45.4 cm [Patricia Wengraf]
Attributed works:
Giovanni di Pietro, 1432-pre 1479 A Court Scene £100,000-£200,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
Guido Reni Bologna, 1575 - 1642 Christ Bearing the Cross Oil on copper, 49.5 x 36.5 cm [Moretti]
Attributed works:
Jewellery presentation project, by Salvador Dalí (1904–89). 1949– 51. Watercolour, gouache, pencil and collage on cardboard, 30.2 by 18.4 cm. [GALERIA MAYORAL, BARCELONA AND PARIS/Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Jupiter and Antiope, by Rembrandt (1606–69). 1659. Etching and drypoint on paper, 13.7 by 20.4 cm. [GALERIE H.H. RUMBLER, FRANKFURT Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Le Palais de rideaux (The Palace of curtains), by René Magritte (1898–1967). 1928. Oil on canvas, 81 by 116 cm. [GALERIE DE LA BÉRAUDIÈRE, BRUSSELS/Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Niccolo Giolfino (1476 – 1555), Mucius Scaevola thrusting his hand into the Flame £100,000-£200,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
Rosalba Carriera (1673–1757) Portrait of a Gentleman, c. 1730 Pastel on paper, laid down on canvas 61 x 45.7 cm (24 x 18 in) Charles H. Schwartz Endowment Fund, 2023.33.1 Recently acquired by the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Connecticut [Ben Elwes Fine Art]
Attributed works:
Vase, by Arthur Craco (1869–1955). c.1900. Enamelled terracotta, height 18.5 cm. [LANCZ GALERIE, BRUSSELS Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Virgin of the Immaculate Conception, attributed to Gervais Il Delabarre (1603–1650/53). France, c.1630–40. Gilt and polychrome terracotta, 70 by 55 by 35 cm. GALERIE SISMANN, PARIS/Fine Arts La Biennale]
Attributed works:
Vrancke van der Stockt, Two altar-piece fragments, 15th Century £20,000-£30,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Attributed works:
Winter landscape with ice skater and a bird trap, by Pieter Brueghel the Younger (1564–1638). Oil on panel, 38 by 55.2 cm. [DE JONCKHEERE GALLERY, GENEVA/Fine Arts La Biennale]
Non-western art unattributed:
Folio from the Dastan-i Amir Hamza. Bikaner, Rajastan, c.1680. Ink, watercolour and gold on paper, 24.9 by 16 cm. [ART PASSAGES, SAN FRANCISCO Fine Arts La Biennale]
Non-western art unattributed:
Makonde anthropomorphic pipe. Tanzania or Mozambique, early 20th century. Wood, height 32.5 cm. [BERNARD DE GRUNNE, BRUSSELS. Fine Arts La Biennale]
Western art unattributed:
Head of a king. France, 15th century. Stone, height 26 cm. [GALERIE RATTON  LADRIÈRE, PARIS/Fine Arts La Biennale]
Western art unattributed:
The Master of Monte Oliveto, Christ on the Cross, Early 14th Century £100,000-£200,000 [Sloane Street Auctions]
Article
Aby Warburg’s Hertziana lecture, 1929
08/2023 | 1445 | 165
Pages: 852–873
related names
Author:
Sears, Elizabeth (Sears, Elizabeth)
Subjects
art literature:
art literature:
art literature:
dates:
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. The lecture hall in the Bibliotheca Hertziana, Palazzo Zuccari, Rome. Photograph, c.1995. (Bibliotheca Hertziana, Rome).
Attributed works:
10 and 11. Panel I of the Hertziana lecture, photographs by Pompeo Sansaini. 1929. Hand-numbered, 1–35. (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
12. Detail of Fig.7, showing a carved relief of the Justice of Trajan.
Attributed works:
13. Detail of The children of Venus, showing a dancing couple, attributed to Baccio Baldini. c.1464. Engraving, 32 by 21.5 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
14. Detail of The children of Venus, showing a dancing couple, attributed to Baccio Baldini. c.1465. Engraving, 25.5 by 18 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
15. Panel VIb of the Hertziana lecture, photograph by Pompeo Sansaini. 1929. The panel includes two depictions of the Battle of Constantine, by Piero della Francesca (nos.216–17) and Giulio Romano (no.215). (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
16. Chart sketched by Aby Warburg, 8th February 1929. Media represented in the twelve Hertziana ‘plates’ following the C-sketches consisting of 287 photographs distributed across nine screens before the discarding of Plate VI. (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
17. The monument to Giordano Bruno, Campo dei Fiori, Rome, by Ettore Ferrari. 1889. Bronze. The statue is on the site of Bruno’s execution on 17th February 1600. (Photograph the author).
Attributed works:
2. Gertrud Bing, Aby Warburg and Franz Alber in their sitting room at the Palace Hotel, April 1929. In the background is a screen constructed for the Hertziana lecture: to the left, the first eight of the twenty photographs by Pompeo Sansaini documenting the image-series; to the right, a scattering of photographs that had been on display. (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
3 and 4. The evolution of Hertziana Panel 1 (‘Energetic inversion’) in arrangements of photographs sketched by Gertrud Bing. Demonstration evening (5th December 1928) and A-series (January 1929). See also Figs.5 and 6. (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
5 and 6. The evolution of Hertziana Panel 1 (‘Energetic inversion’) in arrangements of photographs sketched by Gertrud Bing. The B-series and the (final) C-series (January 1929). (Warburg Institute Archive, London).
Attributed works:
7. The first terrace of Purgatory: the marble reliefs and the repentance of the proud: an illustration for Purgatorio, Canto X of Dante’s Divine Comedy, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1488–92. Metalpoint and brown ink on parchment, 32.2 by 47 cm. (Kupferstichkabinett, Staatliche Museen, Berlin).
Attributed works:
8. Adoration of the shepherds, by Domenico Ghirlandaio. 1485. Oil on panel, 167 by 167 cm. (S. Trinita Florence; photograph © Raffaello Bencini; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
9. Detail of a relief below the tomb of Francesco Sassetti, showing Sassetti being mourned, attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo. 1485–90. Pietra serena. (S. Trinita, Florence).
Article
Newly attributed drawings by Botticelli
04/2023 | 1441 | 165
Pages: 358-365
related names
Author:
Rinaldi, Furio (Rinaldi, Furio)
Subjects
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Study for a standing man (St Sebastian), by Sandro Botticelli. c.1473–74. Metalpoint (silver?) and white gouache on ochre prepared paper, 18.4 by 9.3 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris).
Attributed works:
10. Detail of Fig.12, showing the face of the third onlooker on the right.
Attributed works:
11. Head of a man in near profile looking left, here attributed to Sandro Botticelli. c.1468–70. Traces of black chalk, metalpoint (lead?) heightened with white and grey wash, on yellow-ochre prepared paper, 13.2 by 11 cm. (Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford).
Attributed works:
12. Adoration of the Magi, by Sandro Botticelli, showing the face of an onlooker. c.1470–75. Tempera and oil on poplar panel, 68 by 102 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
13. Head of a veiled woman, by Fra Filippo Lippi. c.1452. Silverpoint and white gouache, retouched with pen and brown ink and red chalk, on ochre-prepared paper, 30 by 20.5 cm. (Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
2. Study of two standing figures and a right hand, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1475. Silverpoint and white gouache on mauve-lilac prepared paper, 16.5 by 10 cm. (Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille).
Attributed works:
3. Two partial studies of a profile, here attributed to Sandro Botticelli. c.1475. Metalpoint (lead?) and white gouache on yellowochre prepared paper, 18.9 by 7.1 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e Stampe delle Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
4. Detail of the Cestello Annunciation, by Sandro Botticelli, showing the face of the Archangel Gabriel. 1489. Tempera on panel, 150 by 156 cm. (Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
5. Standing man turned to the right, here attributed to Sandro Botticelli. c.1475. Metalpoint (lead?) and white gouache on yellow-ochre prepared paper, 18.9 by 7.1 cm. (recto of Fig.3). (Gabinetto dei Disegni e Stampe delle Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
6. Study for a standing draped figure turned to the left, by Sandro Botticelli. Metalpoint (lead?) and white gouache on ochre prepared paper, 18.3 by 8.3 cm. (© RMN-Grand Palais; Musée du Louvre; Stéphane Maréchalle).
Attributed works:
7. Virgin and Child with the young St John the Baptist, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1468–70. Tempera and gold on poplar panel, 90.7 by 67 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris; Tarker; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
8. Head of a woman looking down to the left, here attributed to Sandro Botticelli. c.1468–70. Metalpoint (lead?) heightened with white and light grey wash on yellow-ochre prepared paper, 13.4 by 10.7 cm. (Christ Church Picture Gallery, Oxford).
Attributed works:
9. Detail of Fig.7, showing the face of the Virgin.
Exhibition Review
Botticelli: Artist and Designer
12/2021 | 1425 | 163
Pages: 1178-1180
related names
Reviewer:
Röstel, Alexander (Röstel, Alexander )
Subjects
dates:
museums and institutions:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Botticelli: Artist and Designer Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris 10th September 2021–24th January 2022 | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
10. Giuliano de’ Medici, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1478– 80. Tempera and oil on panel, 59.5 by 39.3 cm. (Accademia Carrara, Bergamo; exh. Musée Jacquemart- André, Paris).
Attributed works:
8. Virgin and St John the Baptist adoring the Christ Child in front of a view of Venice, by the Master of the Gothic Buildings (Jacopo Foschi?). c.1500. Tempera on panel, diameter 71.5 cm. (Musée Jacquemart- André, Paris; © Studio Sébert Photographes; exh. Musée Jacquemart André, Paris).
Attributed works:
9. Judgment of Paris, by Workshop of Sandro Botticelli. c.1482–85. Tempera on panel, 81 by 197 cm. (Giorgio Cini Foundation, Venice; exh. Musée Jacquemart- André, Paris).
Article
The house and collection of Giuliano, Antonio and Francesco da Sangallo
08/2021 | 1421 | 163
Pages: 668-705
related names
Author:
Röstel, Alexander (Röstel, Alexander )
Subjects
sources:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Simonetta Vespucci as Cleopatra, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–1500. Tempera on panel, 57 by 42 cm. (Musée Condé, Chantilly).
Attributed works:
10. Ground plan of the house of the architect, from Filarete: Libro architettonico. c.1460–64. (Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Florence).
Attributed works:
11. Note by Leonardo da Vinci (sixth line from bottom, inverted), from a page in the Codex Arundel, probably referring to a sculpture in the Casa Sangallo. c.1500–03. Pen and ink on paper, 20.5 by 29 cm. (British Library, London).
Attributed works:
12. Statue of a Roman consul excavated in Florence in 1529. (From V. Borghini: Discorsi, Florence 1584).
Attributed works:
13. Giuliano da Sangallo and Francesco Giamberti, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–90. Oil on panel, each panel 47.5 by 33.5 cm. (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam).
Attributed works:
14. Leonardo Buonafede, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1545–50. Red chalk on paper, 32.2 by 26.1 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
15. Building of a palace, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–90. Oil on panel, 77.4 by 197 cm. (John and Mable Ringling Museum, Sarasota; Scala Archives).
Attributed works:
17. Taddeo di Gaddo, Gaddo di Zanobi and Agnolo di Taddeo Gaddi, attributed to the workshop of Fra Angelico. c.1425–30. Tempera on panel, 47 by 89 cm. (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
19. Virgin and Child with St John and an angel, by workshop of Sandro Botticelli. c.1490. Tempera on poplar, diameter of painting 84.5 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
2. Detail of the Pianta della Catena, by Lucantonio degli Uberti, based on an engraving by Francesco Rosselli, showing Borgo Pinti visible behind SS. Annunziata and the Ospedale degli Innocenti. c.1490–1510. Woodcut, 57.8 by 131.6 cm. (Kupferstichkabinett der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin– Preußischer Kulturbesitz; photograph Jörg P. Anders).
Attributed works:
20. Roman consul. First century AD, with later restorations. Marble. (Palazzo Gondi, Florence).
Attributed works:
21. Three female figures with four putti, attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490. Pen and ink, with brown wash, heightened with lead white partly oxidised, on an orange-red ground on paper, 27.2 by 40.1 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
22. Allegory of abundance or autumn, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1480–85. Pen and brown ink, with brown wash, heightened with white, over black and red chalk on an orange-red ground on paper, 31.7 by 25.2 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
23. The rape of Europa, by Giovanni Francesco Rustici. c.1495. Glazed terracotta, 32.7 by 40.3 by 5 cm. (Victoria and Albert Museum, London).
Attributed works:
24. The rape of Europa, by the workshop of Filippino Lippi. c.1495. Black chalk with white heightening on paper, 14.5 by 15.6 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
25. Acquaio, by Simone Mosca. 1527–34. Sandstone (pietra serena), height 495.3 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
26. Europa, formerly attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo, now attributed to Raffaellino del Garbo. c.1495. Pen, iron gall ink and white lead on paper, 14 by 19.3 cm. (Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Milan).
Attributed works:
27. Killing of a bull, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513, Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
27. Killing of a bull, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513, Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
29. Studies of Ionic capitals, by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger. c.1530–45. Pen and brown ink on paper, 35.7 by 28.7 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
3. Plan of a proposed Medici villa on via Laura, Florence, by Giuliano da Sangallo and Antonio da Sangallo the Elder, with Borgo Pinti running vertically on the right-hand side, inscribed ‘via dapintti’ and the Casa Sangallo to the right of ‘via’, c.1512–15. Black chalk, pen and ink, brush and ink washes on paper, 69.4 by 63.9 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe delle Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence, hereafter GDSU; inv. no.282 A).
Attributed works:
3. Plan of a proposed Medici villa on via Laura, Florence, by Giuliano da Sangallo and Antonio da Sangallo the Elder, with Borgo Pinti running vertically on the right-hand side, inscribed ‘via dapintti’ and the Casa Sangallo to the right of ‘via’, c.1512–15. Black chalk, pen and ink, brush and ink washes on paper, 69.4 by 63.9 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe delle Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence, hereafter GDSU; inv. no.282 A).
Attributed works:
30. Study of an ancient vault in Rome, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513. Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
31. Crucifix, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–40. Wood, 184 by 178 cm. (S. Maria Nuova, Florence; photograph courtesy Gianluca Amato).
Attributed works:
32. Cosimo de’ Medici with Florentine artists, by Giorgio Vasari. 1550s. Fresco. (Palazzo della Signoria, Florence).
Attributed works:
33. Preparatory design for the cenotaph of John Hawkwood, by Paolo Uccello. c.1433–36. Silverpoint heightened in white on a prepared light green ground, squared with a stylus for transfer, on paper, 46.1 by 33.3 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
34. Virgin with the Christ Child, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1540–45. Terracotta, 84 by 98.5 by 20 cm. (Skulpturensammlung und Museum für Byzantinische Kunst, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin; photograph Jörg P. Anders).
Attributed works:
35. Self-portrait, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1570. Bronze, diameter 9.65 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
36. St John baptising, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–38. Bronze, height 53 cm. (Frick Collection, New York).
Attributed works:
37. Design for the high altar of Florence Cathedral, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1546. Pen and brown ink on paper, 22.5 by 27.4 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
38. Virgin and Child with St Anne, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1522–26. Marble. (Orsanmichele, Florence; Scala Archives).
Attributed works:
39. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1550–60. Marble, height 76 cm. (Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence).
Attributed works:
4. Detail of a ground plan of a house, possibly a design for the Casa Sangallo, attributed to Francesco da Sangallo. c.1510–40. Black chalk on paper. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
40. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1570. Bronze, diameter 9.29 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
41. Design for an equestrian monument to Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1540–60. Pen and ink on paper, 24.8 by 24.4 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
42. Astrology, by Giambologna. c.1575. Red wax, height 14.6 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
5. Ground plan of the Casa Sangallo before 1576. (Alexander Röstel and Marta Castellini, based on a plan by Gianluca Belli, 2017).
Attributed works:
6. Palazzo Ximenes-Panciatichi, formerly the Casa Sangallo, Borgo Pinti, Florence.
Attributed works:
7. Detail of Nova pulcherrimae civitatis Florentiae topographia accuratissime delineata, by Stefano Buonsignori, showing the Sangallo property above the number 180. 1584. Etching. (Museo di Palazzo Vecchio, Florence).
Attributed works:
8. Barrel vault in the Salone di Leone X, Villa Medici, Poggio a Caiano, designed by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1510. (Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
9. Barrel vault in the Palazzo Ximenes-Panciatichi, Florence, designed by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1500. Stucco. (Photograph the author).
Attributed works:
the listing is known. The contents of the scrittoio can therefore only be reconstructed tentatively. Drawings, such as those in the Codex Geymüller, initiated by Antonio the Elder and expanded by Francesco well into the 1540s, were probably stored there, and these might have included works by other artists.202 The Codex Barberiniano (Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana), a folio volume of architectural drawings by Giuliano later annotated by Francesco, is first documented in the collection of Benedetto di Bartolomeo Gondi in 1609, just a few years after the sale of the Casa Sangallo.203 Like the existence of copies of the drawings in the Codex Barberiniano, this provenance suggests that architectural drawings by the Sangallos became coveted items for collectors and practitioners alike. It is known, for example, that Lorenzo Sirigatti, who published a book on perspective in 1596, owned a ‘framed perspectival drawing by Sangallo’.204 Francesco’s only securely attributed bronze sculpture is St John baptising, made for the holy water font of S. Maria delle Carceri, the centrally-planned church in Prato designed by his father (Fig.36).205 His second will indicates that he owned many more, mingled with ancient examples, but none has been securely identified.206 In addition to bronze sculptures, the scrittoio collection to Francesco, see Tomasso XXV: A Celebration of Notable Sales, London 2018, pp.58–59. 207 On Francesco’s medallic selfportraits, see Donetti, op. cit. (note 60), pp.103–21; see also Middeldorf, op. cit. (note 68), pp.124–28 and 138. 208 Donetti, op. cit. (note 60), p.106. For an example of the medal dated 1551 with Francesco on the obverse and his wife on the reverse, see Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence, inv. no.6233. 209 I. Lavin: ‘Divine grace and the remedy of the imperfect: Michelangelo’s signature on the St Peter’s Pietà’, Artibus et historiae 34 (2013), pp.277–328. 210 For an overview, including a partial translation of the Martelli letters, see P. Attwood: Italian Medals c.1530–1600 in British Public Collections, London 2003, I, pp.330–34, II, pls.166–72; for a complete transcription, see Waldman, op. cit. (note 182), pp.103–04. See also Donetti, op. cit. (note 19), pp.89–90. 211 For references to books owned by artists of the Florentine Renaissance, see Carl, op. cit. (note 200); D. Covi: ‘Four new documents concerning Andrea del Verrocchio’, Art Bulletin 48 (1966), pp.97–103; A. Decaria: ‘Un copista di classici italiani e i libri di Luca della Robbia’, Rinascimento 47 (2007), pp.243–87; and Z. Sarnecka: ‘Luca della Robbia and his books: the Renaissance artist as devotee’, Artibus et historiae 37 (2016), pp.291–301. See also F. Ames- Lewis: The Intellectual Life of the Early Renaissance Artist, New Haven and London 2000. 212 For the unlikely possibility that Giuliano and Francesco da Sangallo owned, annotated and illustrated a copy of the editio princeps of Cristoforo Landino’s commentary on Dante’s Divine Comedy in the Biblioteca Vallicelliana, Rome, see Degenhart, op. cit. (note 38), pp.101– 287; and Gamberini, op. cit. (note 185), pp.169–91, at p.174. For copies of Pliny’s Natural History available in fifteenth-century Florence, see R. Brennan: ‘Between Pliny and the trecento: Ghiberti on the history of painting’, in F. Jonietz, W.-D. Löhr and A. Nova, eds: Ghiberti Teorico: Natura, arte e coscienza storica nel Quattrocento, Milan 2019, pp.43–60, at p.43, note 12. 36. St John baptising, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–38. Bronze, height 53 cm. (Frick Collection, New York).
Western art unattributed:
16. Five masters of the Florentine Renaissance. c.1490–1510. Oil on wood, 65.5 by 213 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris).
Book Review
Botticelli: Heroines and Heroes
10/2020 | 1411 | 162
Pages: 902-904
related names
Reviewer:
Howard, Jeremy (Howard, Jeremy)
Subjects
Reviewed Items
works:
Botticelli: Heroines and Heroes Edited by Nathaniel Silver. 128 pp. incl. 80 col. ills. (Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, and Paul Holberton, London, 2019), £35. ISBN 978–1–911300–61–8. | :
Illustrations
Attributed works:
3. Story of Lucretia, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1500. Tempera, oil and gold on panel, 83.8 by 176.8 cm. (Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston).
Article
Battening spalliera paintings: reflections on twenty-five years of research
01/2020 | 1402 | 162
Pages: 37-45
related names
Author:
Barriault, Anne B. (Barriault, Anne B.)
Subjects
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Story of Virginia, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1500. Oil and tempera on panel, 86 by 165 cm. (Accademia Carrara, Bergamo).
Attributed works:
10. Fight between the Lapiths and centaurs, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1500–15. Oil on panel, 71 by 260 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
2. Story of Lucretia, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1500. Oil and tempera on panel, 83.8 cm by 176.8 cm. (Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston).
Attributed works:
3. Episodes from the life of Alexander the Great, by the workshop of Ghirlandaio. 1493–94. Tempera on panel, 76 by 229.5 cm. (Victoria and Albert Museum, London).
Attributed works:
4. Julius Caesar and the crossing of the Rubicon, by the workshop of Ghirlandaio. 1493–94. Tempera and gold on panel, 73.5 by 170 cm. (Victoria and Albert Museum, London).
Attributed works:
5. The story of Griselda: Part one, marriage, by the Master of the Story of Griselda. c.1494. Oil and tempera on panel, 61.6 by 154.3 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
6. The back of the panel illustrated in Fig.5, showing vertical battens used to stabilise the panel and/or attach it to its setting. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
7. Alexander the Great, by the Master of the Story of Griselda. c.1500. Tempera on panel, 105.4 by 50.8 cm. (The Barber Institute of Fine Arts, University of Birmingham).
Attributed works:
8. Claudia Quinta, by Neroccio de’ Landi and the Master of the Story of Griselda. c.1493–94. Tempera on panel, 104 by 46 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
9. Detail of Fig.10, showing Hylonome and Cylarus.
Article
An inventory of Lorenzo Ghiberti’s collection of antiquities
04/2019 | 1393 | 161
Pages: 274-299
related names
Author:
Carl, Doris (Carl, Doris)
Subjects
art literature:
dates:
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Self-portrait, by Lorenzo Ghiberti, from the east doors of the Baptistery, Florence (the Doors of Paradise). 1425–52. Gilt bronze. (Museo dell’Opera del’Duomo, Florence; photograph Alamy).
Attributed works:
11. The goat Amalthea nursing Zeus, by Bertoldo di Giovanni and others. c.1490–95. Glazed terracotta relief, height 58 cm. (Villa Medici, Poggio a Caiano).
Attributed works:
14. Detail of the Moses relief from the east doors of the Baptistery, Florence (the Doors of Paradise), by Lorenzo Ghiberti. 1425–52. Gilt bronze, 79.5 by 79.5 cm. (Museo dell’Opera del’Duomo, Florence; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
16. Reverse of a medal of Giovanna Tornabuoni, by Niccolò Fiorentino. c.1486. Bronze, diameter 7.9 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
17. The Three Graces, by Raphael. c.1503–05. Panel, 17 by 17 cm. (Musée Condé, Chantilly; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
18. Detail of Primavera, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1482. Panel, 203 by 314 cm. (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
19. Detail of Allegory of April, by Francesco del Cossa. Fresco. (Palazzo Schifanoia, Ferrara; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
2. Portrait of Vittorio di Lorenzo Ghiberti, by Lorenzo Ghiberti, from the east doors of the Baptistery, Florence (the Doors of Paradise). 1425–52. Gilt bronze. (Museo dell’Opera del’Duomo, Florence; photograph Alamy).
Attributed works:
24. Nymph and putto and Man asleep on a bed, by Giovanni da Udine after designs by Raphael. 1516–19. Stucco reliefs. (Vatican Loggie, Rome).
Attributed works:
28. Detail of a cassone panel, attributed to the Master of the Argonauts. 1444 or 1469. Panel. (Bode Museum, Berlin).
Attributed works:
29. Detail of the Resurrection relief on the north doors of the Baptistery, Florence, showing a sleeping soldier, by Lorenzo Ghiberti. 1414–24. Bronze, 65 by 57.5 cm. (Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
30. Hercules with a lion’s pelt, attributed to the Hercules Master, from the Porta della Mandorla, Florence Cathedral. c.1390–1400. Marble. (Photograph Sailko).
Attributed works:
5 Detail of A battle, by Bertoldo di Giovanni, showing a figure of Victory. c.1479. Bronze, 45 by 90 cm. (Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence; Bridgeman Images).
Western art unattributed:
10. Goat. Hellenistic, first–second century AD. Bronze, height 13.2 cm. (Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Florence).
Western art unattributed:
12. Portrait of an unknown woman, shown from three angles. Roman, c.AD 150. Bronze, height 36 cm. (Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Florence).
Western art unattributed:
13. Portrait of Faustina Maior. c.AD 105–140. Marble, height 63 cm. (Capitoline Museum, Rome).
Western art unattributed:
15. The Three Graces, Roman copy of a Hellenistic model. Marble. (Piccolomini Library, Siena).
Western art unattributed:
20. Roman relief mirrors depicting the Three Graces. First–second century AD. Bronze, diameter of each c.12.5 cm. (a) private collection, Paris; (b) State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg; (c) Seattle Art Museum, Washington; (d) art market, Paris; (e) J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; (f) University of Toronto; (g) North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh; (h) formerly Bardo National Museum, Tunis; (i) art market, Basel; (j) Bavarian State Archaeological Collection, Munich.
Western art unattributed:
21. The Three Graces. Mirror, Roman, first–second century AD. Bronze, diameter 12 cm. (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Western art unattributed:
22. The Bed of Polyclitus. Copy after the relief belonging to Lorenzo Ghiberti. Mid-sixteenth century. Marble, 34 by 50 cm. (Private collection).
Western art unattributed:
23. The Bed of Polyclitus. Here dated to the fifteenth century. Marble, height 46 cm. (Palazzo Mattei di Giove, Rome).
Western art unattributed:
25. Detail of a sarcophagus depicting the mourning of Meleager. Roman, second century AD. Marble. (Torno Collection, Milan; photograph Palazzo Montalto, Florence).
Western art unattributed:
26. Detail of a sarcophagus depicting Meleager’s corpse being carried home. Roman, fourth quarter of the second century AD. Marble. (Althorp House, Northamptonshire; originally Palazzo Sciarra, Rome).
Western art unattributed:
27. Above Detail of a sarcophagus, showing a nereid. Roman, late second– early third century AD. Marble. (Museo dell’Opera del Duomo, Siena).
Western art unattributed:
3. Family tree of the Ghiberti.
Western art unattributed:
4. The Gaddi torso. Hellenistic, second century BC. Marble, height 84.4 cm. (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence).
Western art unattributed:
6. Victory. Late Hellenistic. Bronze, height 16.3 cm. (Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore).
Western art unattributed:
7. Hercules Pomarius. Etruscan, third–first century BC. Bronze, 7.3 by 8.7 by 7.2 cm. (Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore).
Western art unattributed:
8. Kairos. Roman, first century AD. Marble. (Formerly Palazzo Medici, Florence).
Western art unattributed:
9. Diskophoros, Roman copy of statue by Naukydes. Marble, height 178 cm. (Liebieghaus, Frankfurt).
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