Gherardo Cibo (Genoa 1512-1597 Rocca Contrada)
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Gherardo Cibo (Genoa 1512-1597 Rocca Contrada)

The bank of a stream

Details
Gherardo Cibo (Genoa 1512-1597 Rocca Contrada)
The bank of a stream
inscribed ‘rippone sotto la selva d[el] smed. o d[ei] fossi./ -R.[icavato] d[el] [= venerdi] li 13. d[i] fibr. 1568:-’ and with number ‘40’
pen and brown ink
5 ½ x 8 1/8 in. (14.4 x 20.8 cm)
Provenance
with Colnaghi, London (exhib. cat., Exhibition of Old Master Drawings, 1971, no. 14, as Messer Ulisse Severino da Cingoli).
Anonymous sale; Christie’s, London, 26 November 1974, lot 2 (as Messer Ulisse Severino da Cingoli; 110 gns. to Hans Calmann), acquired from Hans Calmann by Robert Landolt.
Literature
Exhibited
Zurich, Graphische Sammlung ETH, Zwiegespräch mit Zeichnungen. Werke des 15. bis 18. Jahrhunderts aus der Sammlung Robert Landolt, 2013-2014, no. 7, ill. (catalogue entry by M. Matile).
Special notice
These lots have been imported from outside the EU or, if the UK has withdrawn from the EU without an agreed transition deal, from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

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Stijn Alsteens
Stijn Alsteens

Lot Essay


Gherardo Cibo was a member of a highly influential Genoese family (among his forebears was Pope Innocent VIII) who became an exceptionally gifted draughtsman and botanist after abandoning his military and diplomatic career. In 1540 he left Rome for Rocca Contrada (nowadays Arcevia) where he produced a great number of drawings from nature. The present sheet is one of twelve which come from a dismembered sketchbook inscribed ‘Libro 24’ and offered by Colnaghi in 1971 (see Provenance). As is the case with this sheet, many of Cibo’s landscape drawings are carefully inscribed by the artist with location and date. He often used astrological signs to indicate the day of the week; in this case a sign of Venus for Friday. Many of Cibo’s drawings were given to a variety of Northern artists and later called Messer Ulisse Severino da Cingoli until they were correctly given to Cibo by Arnold Nesselrath in 1989 (Gherardo Cibo alias Ulisse Severino da Cingoli, exhib. cat., San Severino Marche, Centro Studi Salimbeni per le Arti Figurative, 1989, pp. 5-35).

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