PIETRO BUONACCORSI, CALLED PERINO DEL VAGA (FLORENCE 1501-1547 ROME)
Pietro Buonaccorsi, called Perino del Vaga (Florence 1501-1547 Rome)
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PIETRO BUONACCORSI, CALLED PERINO DEL VAGA (FLORENCE 1501-1547 ROME)

Three standing male figures, one bearing a vessel

Details
PIETRO BUONACCORSI, CALLED PERINO DEL VAGA (FLORENCE 1501-1547 ROME)
Three standing male figures, one bearing a vessel
with inscription ‘Titian’ (upper right)
black chalk, pen and brown ink, some traces of pen and black ink
10 x 6 7/8 in (25.4 x 17.5 cm)
Provenance
Baron E.L. von Weber; then by descent.
Anonymous sale; Christie’s, London, 8 July 1975, lot 45 (as Federico Zuccaro, bought by H. Shickman).
with Katrin Bellinger Kunsthandel, Munich (Master Drawings, 2001, no. 4, ill.), from which acquired by Kasper in 2002.
Literature
L. Wolk-Simon, ‘Two drawings by Perino del Vaga’, in Perino del Vaga. Prima, durante, dopo (Atti delle Giornate Internazionali di Studio, Genova 26-27 maggio 2001), Genoa, 2004, pp. 27-30, fig. 1.
Exhibited
New York, The Morgan Library and Museum, Mannerism and Modernism. The Kasper Collection of Drawings and Photographs, 2011, no. 6, ill. (entry by R. Eitel-Porter).
New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Perino del Vaga in New York Collections, 2010-2011 (without catalogue).

Brought to you by

Giada Damen, Ph.D.
Giada Damen, Ph.D. AVP, Specialist, Head of Sale

Lot Essay

The attribution to Perino del Vaga was made by Linda Wolk-Simon (op. cit.) and confirmed by Hugo Chapman. Wolk-Simon dates the drawing to the beginning of the 1520s, Perino’s early Roman period. The scholar compared the present study with a pen drawing of Saint Peter in the Clark Art Institute, Williamstown (inv. 2003.9.2; see Renaissance and Baroque Drawings from the Collection of John and Alice Steiner, exhib. cat., Cambridge, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard Art Museums, 1977, no. 33, ill.). After the death of Raphael in 1520, Perino established himself as an independent master, developing an individual stylistic language that became characteristic of his mature graphic output (see for instance The Cleansing of the Temple, at the Nationalmuseum, Stockholm, inv. NMH 256/1973; see Perino del Vaga tra Raffaello e Michelangelo, exhib. cat., Mantua, Palazzo Te, 2001, no. 139, ill.).

In the first half of the 1520s Perino worked on the decoration of several chapels in various Roman churches. While the present study cannot be connected with any specific commission, Wolk-Simon suggested that it may have been made in preparation for an Adoration of the Magi (op. cit., p. 27). The turbaned male figure in the forefront, holding a vessel, can easily be identified as one of the Magi. The two figures behind him could be the other Magi or bystanders witnessing the presumed Adoration.

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