A GILT-BRONZE MODEL OF THE FLAGELLATION
A GILT-BRONZE MODEL OF THE FLAGELLATION
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A GILT-BRONZE MODEL OF THE FLAGELLATION

AFTER ALESSANDRO ALGARDI (1598-1654) AND FRANCOIS DUQUESNOY (1597-1643), ITALIAN, 17TH CENTURY

Details
A GILT-BRONZE MODEL OF THE FLAGELLATION
AFTER ALESSANDRO ALGARDI (1598-1654) AND FRANCOIS DUQUESNOY (1597-1643), ITALIAN, 17TH CENTURY
With a marble column behind the figure of Christ, each figure engraved on the calves with the letters 'PC’, on an ebonised pearwood base
The figure of Christ 8 5/8 in. (22 cm.) high; 16 ½ in. (41.8 cm.) high, overall


Provenance
Casa d'Aste Pitti, Florence, 10-12 December 1980, lot 369.
Art Market, Florence.
Private Collection, Switzerland.
IRSA, Verlagsanstalt, Vienna, 1987-1989, where acquired by Barbara Piasecka Johnson in 1989.
Literature
J. Montague, Alessandro Algardi, vol. II, London, 1985, no. 9.C.23, pp. 319-320.
J. Grabski, 'The Corsini Flagellation Group by Alessandro Algardi', Artibus et Historiae VII, 16, 1987, pp. 9-23.
Exhibited
Warsaw, Royal Castle, Opus Sacrum, From the Collection of Barbara Piasecka Johnson, 10 April - 23 September 1990, no. 64.

Brought to you by

Alexandra Cruden
Alexandra Cruden

Lot Essay

There has been considerable debate concerning the attribution of this Flagellation group, which has at various points been attributed to two of the leading figures in Baroque Rome, Alessandro Algardi and François du Quesnoy. The group exists in two types, in which the figure of Christ is always consistent but the pair of flagellators are different. In light of Bellori's attribution of a pair to du Quesnoy (G.P. Bellori, Le Vite de' pittori, scoltori e architetti moderni, ed. Evelina Borea, Turin, 1976, p. 301-302) and the notation in Ercole Ferrata's inventory of a pair by the same artist (V. Golzio, 'Lo "Studio" di Ercole Ferrata,' Archivi, II, 1935, pp. 70), Jennifer Montagu has suggested that one of the types originated with Algardi and the other du Quesnoy. The present group is seemingly unique in being the only known version in which one flagellator is taken from each type (Montagu, Alessandro Algardi, vol. II, London, 1985, p. 315).

The engraved 'PC’ on the calves of each figure has been interpreted as a reference to the Florentine Palazzo Corsini. Other sculptures from this collection, however, do not bear any such monograms; the engravings’ significance thus remains to be resolved.

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