JACOPO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA C.1510-1592) AND LEANDRO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA 1557-1622 VENICE)
JACOPO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA C.1510-1592) AND LEANDRO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA 1557-1622 VENICE)
JACOPO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA C.1510-1592) AND LEANDRO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA 1557-1622 VENICE)
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Property from a New York Collection
JACOPO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA C.1510-1592) AND LEANDRO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA 1557-1622 VENICE)

Saints James the Greater, Nicholas and Lawrence

Details
JACOPO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA C.1510-1592) AND LEANDRO BASSANO (BASSANO DEL GRAPPA 1557-1622 VENICE)
Saints James the Greater, Nicholas and Lawrence
oil on canvas
38 5⁄8 in. x 28 ¼ in. (98.1 x 71.7 cm.)
Provenance
David Reder, Brussels.
Hugo and Nathalie Weisgall, New York, and by descent to the present owner.
Literature
A. Ballarin, Jacopo Bassano, I, Padua, 1995, no. 115, as Jacopo and Leandro Bassano, pp. 262-264, note 2.
Exhibited
Sacramento, E.B. Crocker Art Gallery, The Collecting Muse: A Selection from the Nathalie and Hugo Weisgall Collection, 30 August-12 October 1975, no. 37 as Francesco Bassano.

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Taylor Alessio
Taylor Alessio Junior Specialist, Head of Part II

Lot Essay

The attribution of this painting to Jacopo Bassano and his son is confirmed by an inscription on its pendant depicting Three male martyr saints, including Saint Stephen, which reads: S(e)r Domenegha (sic) e [Se]r Zoanne Hiero.masari / De La giesia fec. Far q.te do palle / Jac[obus a] po(n)te et eiu(s) (sic) filiu(s) P / M[D]LXXVIIIVII / juni (fig. 1; formerly in the Nelson Shanks collection, sold Sotheby's, New York, 27 January 2022, lot 128). The inscription also provides an exact date for the two paintings (7 June 1578) and, since Francesco Bassano had already left his father's workshop by this date, it can be deduced that Leandro is the son to whom the inscription refers. In his 1995 monograph on Jacopo Bassano, Alessandro Ballarin refers to the pair of paintings as palette (small altarpieces) as they are too small to be considered full-scale altarpieces but too large, and with too great a degree of finish, to have been intended as bozzetti (sketches; loc. cit.). These paintings give valuable insight into the collaborative nature of Jacopo's working practice, as well as providing visual evidence of Jacopo's mature style and Leandro's development within his father's workshop. Another example of a collaboration between father and son is the altarpiece of the Madonna and Child with Saints Agatha and Apollonia, painted for the Chiesa di San Giuseppe in 1580 and now in the Museo Civico, Bassano del Grappa (fig. 2).

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