Valerio Spada (Colle di Valdelsa 1613-1688)
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Valerio Spada (Colle di Valdelsa 1613-1688)

An allegory of Victory on a oak tree (the badge of the Della Rovere family) supporting the arms of the Medici and the Habsburgs, a hunting scene in the background

Details
Valerio Spada (Colle di Valdelsa 1613-1688)
An allegory of Victory on a oak tree (the badge of the Della Rovere family) supporting the arms of the Medici and the Habsburgs, a hunting scene in the background
with inscription '48'
pen and brown ink on vellum
11½ x 16 7/8 in. (292 x 428 mm.)
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis

Lot Essay

The present drawing was executed by Spada for Claudia de'Medici (1604-1648), who first married Francesco Ubaldo della Rovere (1605-1625) and then, after the murder of the latter, Archduke Leopold V of Austria (1586-1632). This drawing was probably drawn while Spada was accompanying his master Lorenzo Lippi to Innsbruck, where Lippi was employed by the Archduke (P. Dearborn Massar, 'Valerio Spada, Seventeenth-Century Florentine Calligrapher and Draughtsman', Master Drawings, 1981, p. 252). While in Innsbruck Lippi wrote a parody of Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata called Il Malmantile Racquisito. In this long poem Lippi devoted a few verses to Spada and described his appreciation of good wine.
Spada was a writer, a draughtsman and a professor of calligraphy to the young Cosimo III and later to his son. His draughtsmanship shows the influence of Stefano della Bella.

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