BACCIO BANDINELLI (FLORENCE 1493-1560)
BACCIO BANDINELLI (FLORENCE 1493-1560)
1 More
BACCIO BANDINELLI (FLORENCE 1493-1560)

A putto holding a cornucopia and stepping on a tortoise, surrounded by a group of standing putti playing musical instruments

Details
BACCIO BANDINELLI (FLORENCE 1493-1560)
A putto holding a cornucopia and stepping on a tortoise, surrounded by a group of standing putti playing musical instruments
black chalk, pen and brown ink, pen and black ink framing lines, watermark acorn with two oak leaves
9 1⁄8 x 15 7⁄8 in. (23.1 x 40.5 cm)
Provenance
John Thane (1748-1818), London (L. 1544 partially erased).
David Rust (1930-2011), Washington D.C.
with Adams Davidson and Co., Washington, D.C.
Mrs. Evan M. Wilson, Washington, D.C.
Anonymous sale; Christie’s, New York, 30 January 1997, lot 10.
with Colnaghi, London (An Exhibition of Master Drawings, 1998, no.3, ill.).
Literature
Baccio Bandinelli. Drawings from British Collections, exhib. cat., Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, 1988, p. 29, under no. 10 (catalogue by R. Ward).
Raffael bis Tizian. Italienische Zeichnungen aus dem Städel Museum, exhib. cat., Frankfurt, Städel Museum, and Paris, Fondation Custodia, 2014-2015, p.124, fig. 23, under no. 34 (catalogue by J. Jacoby).

Brought to you by

Giada Damen, Ph.D.
Giada Damen, Ph.D. Specialist

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

As Roger Ward pointed out (op. cit., p. 29), the present drawing is closely related to the upper left part of the frieze representing putti at play in Donatello's bronze relief The Lamentation of Christ on the Gospel pulpit in the south aisle of the Church of San Lorenzo in Florence. The putto in the center holding a cornucopia in his left hand, the one to his left bending forward, and the one kneeling on his right are almost identical in both works. Bandinelli just replaced the base on which the middle putto stands with a tortoise. The second putto from the right running to the right can also be found in both works. Dr. Ward suggested that Bandinelli most probably did not work directly from Donatello's relief, but that he, like Donatello himself, made use of an antique sarcophagus which was then in the collection of Matteo Strozzi in Florence, and is now in the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore.

As evidence of Bandinelli’s admiration for his great predecessor, three further drawings copying Donatello's reliefs in San Lorenzo are in the British Museum, London (Ward, op. cit., no. 10, ill.), in the Ashmolean Museum and in the Musée Condé, Chantilly. Similar studies of putti at play by Bandinelli appear on the recto of a drawing in the Fondazione Horne in Florence (L. Ragghianti Collobi, Disegni della Fondazione Horne in Firenze, exhib. cat., Florence, Palazzo Strozzi, 1963, p. 10, no. 8, ill.) and another example is in the Städelsches Kunstinstitut in Frankfurt (inv. 447; see Jacoby, op. cit., no. 34).

More from Old Master & British Drawings

View All
View All