The handwriting of the caption “in la vale” appearing on a drawing in the Musée de Grenoble, identical to that on another sheet conserved in the Cooper Hewitt Museum of New York, suggests that both were by the same hand, identified in the past as that of Girolamo da Carpi. It was in fact more probably a pupil of the Ferrarese artist who, like his master, copied ancient statues: sculptures of the Della Valle collection that was among the most visited and studied by artists of the Cinquecento.
The drawings by this anonymous artist enable us to trace to this collection statues that had never previously been copied and of which other drawn reproductions are unknown, as is the case with a statue of 'Venus' in the Boboli Gardens or that of a 'Togatus' in the deposits of the Museo Archeologico Nazionale in Florence.
The idea of identifying the 'Venus' drawn on the Grenoble sheet as the statue today standing in the Boboli Gardens has provided us with an opportunity to reconsider its complex history, closely intertwined with that of the 'Venere Aurea', one of the nobilia opera of the Gallerie degli Uffizi.
At Boboli we also find the 'Dionysus' reproduced in the New York drawing, a statue which, despite its excellent condition and fine workmanship, has never been the object of particular interest in the specialized literature, a fact that has prompted a reappraisal of the work in this article aimed at better defining its chronological and typological placement.
Lastly, an analysis updated in the light of information emerging from recent restoration work has also been attempted for another marble reproduced on a second sheet of the Musée de Grenoble, the so-called 'Young Marcus Aurelius' of the Gallerie degli Uffizi, in whose head – ancient, although not originally belonging to the statue – it is now possible to recognize a portrait of the young Commodus.
The drawings by this anonymous artist enable us to trace to this collection statues that had never previously been copied and of which other drawn reproductions are unknown, as is the case with a statue of 'Venus' in the Boboli Gardens or that of a 'Togatus' in the deposits of the Museo Archeologico Nazionale in Florence.
The idea of identifying the 'Venus' drawn on the Grenoble sheet as the statue today standing in the Boboli Gardens has provided us with an opportunity to reconsider its complex history, closely intertwined with that of the 'Venere Aurea', one of the nobilia opera of the Gallerie degli Uffizi.
At Boboli we also find the 'Dionysus' reproduced in the New York drawing, a statue which, despite its excellent condition and fine workmanship, has never been the object of particular interest in the specialized literature, a fact that has prompted a reappraisal of the work in this article aimed at better defining its chronological and typological placement.
Lastly, an analysis updated in the light of information emerging from recent restoration work has also been attempted for another marble reproduced on a second sheet of the Musée de Grenoble, the so-called 'Young Marcus Aurelius' of the Gallerie degli Uffizi, in whose head – ancient, although not originally belonging to the statue – it is now possible to recognize a portrait of the young Commodus.
Index
Anna Maria Riccomini e Fabrizio Paolucci
"In la vale". About Girolamo da Carpi and the Della Valle and Medici sculptures
read abstract » pp. 3-14
read abstract » pp. 3-14
Bruna Bianco
Saint Peter's chapel in Naples cathedral and the problem of Montano d'Arezzo: proposal for a revision
read abstract » pp. 15-48
read abstract » pp. 15-48
Stefano L’Occaso
On the tracks of the Dalle Masegne brothers in Mantua: the cathedral façade and the Tomb monument of Margherita Malatesta
read abstract » pp. 49-64
read abstract » pp. 49-64
Michela Zurla
From Genoa to Berlin passing through Florence: Wilhelm Bode, Stefano Bardini and the auction of the Santo Varni collection
read abstract » pp. 100-128
read abstract » pp. 100-128
Roberto Bartalini
Francesco Salviati in the chapel of the Margrave of Brandenburg in Santa Maria dell'Anima
read abstract » pp. 129-145
read abstract » pp. 129-145
Alessandro Angelini
The 'Resurrection of Christ' by Guillaume Bonoyseau from Palazzo Ricci Sacchetti in Rome and the French connection for Francesco Salviati
read abstract » pp. 146-158
read abstract » pp. 146-158
Agostino Allegri e Giovanni Renzi
Cremona on the Danube. First look at a handful of the 16th-century drawings in Bratislava
read abstract » pp. 159-178
read abstract » pp. 159-178
Tomaso Montanari
A new 'Portrait of a young man' by Gian Lorenzo Bernini the painter
read abstract » pp. 179-182
read abstract » pp. 179-182