Carlo Dolci (Florence 1616-1686)
Property of Margot Gordon
Carlo Dolci (Florence 1616-1686)

Study of a veiled woman, standing, and a smaller study, seated

Details
Carlo Dolci (Florence 1616-1686)
Study of a veiled woman, standing, and a smaller study, seated
with inscription in ink ‘carlo dolci’ (top left)
red and black chalk
13 ½ x 8 ¾ in. (34.5 x 22.2 cm)

Lot Essay

The present work dates from the beginning of Dolci's career, when he was particularly influenced by his master Jacopo Vignali, by Federico Zuccaro, and by the champions of the Florentine Maniera — Jacopo Pontormo and Rosso Fiorentino — as shown here by the elongated type of the standing figure. Carefully executed with red chalk on a large sheet, the imposing woman, caught with her palms outstretched, was further studied by Dolci in two other red chalk drawings in the Uffizi (inv. nos. 18198F, 1176F), perhaps in preparation for a Madonna in a never completed Crucifixion. The same figure, seated, is studied at lower right, closely resembling the Virgin in Dolci's Holy Family with the Trinity in a private collection (F. Baldassari, Carlo Dolci. Complete Catalogue of Paintings, Florence 2015, no. 11, ill.).

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