CIRCLE OF ANTONIO DI PIETRO AVERLINO, CALLED IL FILARETE (C.1400-1469), FLORENCE OR ROME, MID-15TH CENTURY
CIRCLE OF ANTONIO DI PIETRO AVERLINO, CALLED IL FILARETE (C.1400-1469), FLORENCE OR ROME, MID-15TH CENTURY
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These lots have been imported from outside the EU … Read more PROPERTY FROM THE MICHAEL HALL COLLECTIONS (LOTS 117, 181 AND 267)
CIRCLE OF ANTONIO DI PIETRO AVERLINO, CALLED IL FILARETE (C.1400-1469), FLORENCE OR ROME, MID-15TH CENTURY

CHRIST IN THE TEMPLE

Details
CIRCLE OF ANTONIO DI PIETRO AVERLINO, CALLED IL FILARETE (C.1400-1469), FLORENCE OR ROME, MID-15TH CENTURY
CHRIST IN THE TEMPLE
Polychrome limestone tondo relief
12 ½ in. (31.8 cm.) diam.
Exhibited
New York, Mobile, Evansville and Sacramento, American Bible Society, Mobile Museum of Art, Evansville Museum of Arts and Sciences and Crocker Museum of Art, Icons or Portraits? Images of Jesus and Mary from the Collection of Michael Hall, July 2002 - Jan. 2004, cat. no. 38.
Special notice
These lots have been imported from outside the EU or, if the UK has withdrawn from the EU without an agreed transition deal, from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

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Lot Essay


This rare early tondo is conceivably from the hand of the important Renaissance sculptor, architect and theorist, known as Filarete. According to Vasari, Filarete trained in the studio of Lorenzo Ghiberti, but he developed a personal style that was relatively independent of Florentine influence. In 1433 Filarete moved to Rome and was commssioned by Pope Eugenius IV to design and execute the bronze door of the main porch of the old St Peter’s. In the absence of knowledge surrounding his oeuvre, most attributions to Filarete rest on comparisons to the small, frieze-like reliefs that make up the door. Although no work in limestone is known by Filarete, the hunched forms and slightly over-sized heads which are predominently shown in profile, seen in the present tondo, compare closely to his distinctive Roman style. The composition, with Christ at the centre elucidating subtle points of doctrine to learned scholars below, suggests an interest in and understanding of linear perspective. Comparisons can also be made to Filarete's plaquette illustrating the Triumph of Caesar over King Juba, circa 1433 (see Tomasso Brothers, Important European Bronzes, 2016, no. 9).

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