JACOPO DEL SELLAIO (FLORENCE C.1441-1493)
JACOPO DEL SELLAIO (FLORENCE C.1441-1493)
JACOPO DEL SELLAIO (FLORENCE C.1441-1493)
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JACOPO DEL SELLAIO (FLORENCE C.1441-1493)

The Madonna and Child before a casement, a landscape with Saint John the Baptist, the Flight into Egypt and the Duomo di Firenze beyond

Details
JACOPO DEL SELLAIO (FLORENCE C.1441-1493)
The Madonna and Child before a casement, a landscape with Saint John the Baptist, the Flight into Egypt and the Duomo di Firenze beyond
tempera and gold on panel
26 ¼ x 23 in. (66.7 x 58.4 cm.), with additions of 0 3⁄8 in. (0.8 cm.) to each edge
Provenance
Bernhard von Bülow (1849-1929), Villa Volkonski, Rome, from whom acquired by,
Professor Rudolf von Renvers (1854-1909), and by descent to the present collection.
Literature
‘De las Colecciones Privadas’, Guía quincenal de la actividad intelectual y artística argentina, I, 1947, p. 28.
B. Berenson, Italian Pictures of the Renaissance. Florentine School, I, London, 1963, p. 196, as ‘Jacopo del Sellaio’, noted ‘r. restored/repainted’.
N. Pons, ‘Una Provenienza per Jacopo del Sellaio’, Antichità viva, XXXIII, 1994, p. 19, as ‘Jacopo del Sellaio’.
Exhibited
Buenos Aires, Galerie Muller, Exposición de arte gótico y renacimiento auspiciada por la Asociación para la Lucha contra la Parálisis Infantil, November - December 1944, no. 6.

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Lot Essay

Jacopo del Sellaio, whose surname means '[son] of the saddlemaker', was one of the most productive Florentine painters of his generation. The refined and linear execution of his figures betray Sellaio's indebtedness to Botticelli, who is described by Vasari as having apprenticed in Fra Filippo Lippi's workshop alongside Sellaio (Vasari, ed. 1550, I, p. 401). The casement setting, and high, winding landscape disappearing into the upper right corner also appear to owe some debt to Botticelli’s Madonna of Guidi da Faenza (Paris, Louvre Museum). Sellaio draws on his own environment for his presentation of the carefully rendered landscape; in the background, behind the Madonna’s head, the Cupola of the Duomo of Florence and the edge of the Campanile are visible.

We are grateful to Chris Daly who endorses the attribution to Jacopo del Sellaio on the basis of photographs and dates this painting to c.1483-85.

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