Martino dal Sfriso – mentioned in 1585 in the Piazza universale by Tommaso Garzoni as one of the most noteworthy wax sculptors, admired and collected in the following century by Paolo Del Sera, the celebrated merchant, collector and buying agent in Venice of Cardinal Leopoldo de' Medici – is identified in the present article as Martino Pasqualigo, the pupil of Leone Leoni. Martino's name was hitherto known as one who had been assaulted in Venice by a hired assassin sent by Leoni himself, an aggression that left him facially disfigured (“sfregiato”), hence his nickname. Protected by Orazio Vecellio, and a friend of Giovanni Battista Maganza who mentioned him in some of his poems, Pasqualigo enjoyed an undoubted reputation for his works in coloured wax, documented among other things in the Tribune of the Uffizi and in the collection of Leopoldo de' Medici. Two works formerly in the collection of Paolo Del Sera and of Leopoldo de' Medici are identified here as the wax representing Titian with a portrait of his son Orazio of the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh and as the Leda and the Swan of the Musée National de la Renaissance in Ecouen.
Index
Anna Anguissola
On the semantics of architectural tradition: the biclinium in the House of Apollo at Pompei (VI, 7, 23)
read abstract » pp. 2-21
read abstract » pp. 2-21
Divo Savelli
For the chest of Saints Protus, Hyacinth and Nemesius by Lorenzo Ghiberti: the rediscovered epigraph
read abstract » pp. 22-25
read abstract » pp. 22-25
Guido Rebecchini
Giulio Romano and the production of silverware for Ferrante and Ercole Gonzaga
read abstract » pp. 32-43
read abstract » pp. 32-43
Giovanni Santucci
Two designs by Pellegrino Tibaldi for the 'Sacro Speco' of the Sanctuary of Caravaggio in the Largest Album of John Talman
read abstract » pp. 55-67
read abstract » pp. 55-67
Francesco Petrucci
Considerations regarding Girolamo Troppa: a Roman "tenebrista" of the late 17th century
read abstract » pp. 88-102
read abstract » pp. 88-102