The 'Pseudo-Vitellius' in the Uffizi Gallery is one of the marble
portrait-busts belonging to the extensive modern series deriving from the so-called Grimani 'Pseudo-Vitellius' discovered in the early 16th century.
This article discusses antiquarian events of the Florentine sculpture, which dates back to at least 1666 when the portrait-head was mentioned in the inventory of the Casino di San Marco. The main theories of art scholars regarding its typological and chronological interpretation are also reviewed, since the portrait-bust seems to have been neither so famous or replicated as erroneously believed until now. Much evidence (archival and literary references, artistic and craft productions) confirming the popularity of the subject in the Medicean city is useful in better contextualising the Uffizi 'Pseudo-Vitellius' in the substantial series attested in Florence from the 16th to the 19th century as in the complex network of derivations and models produced on the basis of the so-called Grimani type as well. Amending previous misunderstandings, it has also been possible to appraise the different role played by the Grimani 'Pseudo-Vitellius' prototype and other sculptural types, in particular the Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' and the Albani-Capitoline 'Pseudo-Vitellius', as a model. In this regard, the case of the Genoese Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' is especially interesting. It has in fact been possible to identify various reproductions derived from it, and not from the Grimani type as argued in the past, and therefore re-establish the rightful place of the Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' among the most influential models, one that has been wrongly diminished by art scholars in the past.
portrait-busts belonging to the extensive modern series deriving from the so-called Grimani 'Pseudo-Vitellius' discovered in the early 16th century.
This article discusses antiquarian events of the Florentine sculpture, which dates back to at least 1666 when the portrait-head was mentioned in the inventory of the Casino di San Marco. The main theories of art scholars regarding its typological and chronological interpretation are also reviewed, since the portrait-bust seems to have been neither so famous or replicated as erroneously believed until now. Much evidence (archival and literary references, artistic and craft productions) confirming the popularity of the subject in the Medicean city is useful in better contextualising the Uffizi 'Pseudo-Vitellius' in the substantial series attested in Florence from the 16th to the 19th century as in the complex network of derivations and models produced on the basis of the so-called Grimani type as well. Amending previous misunderstandings, it has also been possible to appraise the different role played by the Grimani 'Pseudo-Vitellius' prototype and other sculptural types, in particular the Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' and the Albani-Capitoline 'Pseudo-Vitellius', as a model. In this regard, the case of the Genoese Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' is especially interesting. It has in fact been possible to identify various reproductions derived from it, and not from the Grimani type as argued in the past, and therefore re-establish the rightful place of the Durazzo 'Pseudo-Vitellius' among the most influential models, one that has been wrongly diminished by art scholars in the past.
Index
Alessandro Bagnoli
Mariano d'Agnolo Romanelli and the Reliquary of Pope Mark: the return of enamelling 'a figure risparmiate' in the late Trecento
read abstract » pag. 3-11
read abstract » pag. 3-11
Elisabetta Cioni
For Matteo di Mino di Pagliaio. New considerations on the Sienese goldsmith's art in the second half of the Trecento
read abstract » pag. 12-46
read abstract » pag. 12-46
Maria Falcone
On the Tomb monument of Margaret of Brabant, the Tomb of Doge Tommaso Campofregoso and other Ligurian works of the Quattrocento
read abstract » pag. 47-89
read abstract » pag. 47-89
Gianluca Amato
The 'Dead Christ' by Francesco di Giorgio at Santa Maria dei Servi in Siena
read abstract » pag. 90-141
read abstract » pag. 90-141
Annamaria Petrioli Tofani
For a catalogue of drawings by Agostino Melissi at the Uffizi
read abstract » pag. 142-173
read abstract » pag. 142-173
Anna Santucci
A 'Pseudo-Vitellius' in the Uffizi Gallery (and other 'Pseudo-Vitellius' busts in Florence between the 16th and the 19th century)
read abstract » pp. 200-217
read abstract » pp. 200-217
Anna Anguissola
Observations on the catalogue of the Dresden sculptures: the case of the “four ancient small young fauns”
read abstract » pag. 221-225
read abstract » pag. 221-225
Valentina Balzarotti
Pellegrino Tibaldi in the church of Sant'Andrea in Via Flaminia
read abstract » pag. 226-232
read abstract » pag. 226-232
Giovanni Renzi
Two works by Camillo Procaccini in Tuscany and an episode in the history of collectionism
read abstract » pag. 233-251
read abstract » pag. 233-251
Luca Fiorentino
Cornelis de Bie and Gian Lorenzo Bernini: observations regarding the critical fortune of Bernini in the Seicento
read abstract » pag. 252-261
read abstract » pag. 252-261
Giovanni Agosti e Jacopo Stoppa
Controversy and peace on the “Grechetto”
read abstract » pag. 262-273
read abstract » pag. 262-273