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Article
The house and collection of Giuliano, Antonio and Francesco da Sangallo
08/2021 | 1421 | 163
Pages: 668-705
related names
Author:
Röstel, Alexander (Röstel, Alexander )
Subjects
sources:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Simonetta Vespucci as Cleopatra, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–1500. Tempera on panel, 57 by 42 cm. (Musée Condé, Chantilly).
Attributed works:
10. Ground plan of the house of the architect, from Filarete: Libro architettonico. c.1460–64. (Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale, Florence).
Attributed works:
11. Note by Leonardo da Vinci (sixth line from bottom, inverted), from a page in the Codex Arundel, probably referring to a sculpture in the Casa Sangallo. c.1500–03. Pen and ink on paper, 20.5 by 29 cm. (British Library, London).
Attributed works:
12. Statue of a Roman consul excavated in Florence in 1529. (From V. Borghini: Discorsi, Florence 1584).
Attributed works:
13. Giuliano da Sangallo and Francesco Giamberti, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–90. Oil on panel, each panel 47.5 by 33.5 cm. (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam).
Attributed works:
14. Leonardo Buonafede, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1545–50. Red chalk on paper, 32.2 by 26.1 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
15. Building of a palace, by Piero di Cosimo. c.1480–90. Oil on panel, 77.4 by 197 cm. (John and Mable Ringling Museum, Sarasota; Scala Archives).
Attributed works:
17. Taddeo di Gaddo, Gaddo di Zanobi and Agnolo di Taddeo Gaddi, attributed to the workshop of Fra Angelico. c.1425–30. Tempera on panel, 47 by 89 cm. (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
19. Virgin and Child with St John and an angel, by workshop of Sandro Botticelli. c.1490. Tempera on poplar, diameter of painting 84.5 cm. (National Gallery, London).
Attributed works:
2. Detail of the Pianta della Catena, by Lucantonio degli Uberti, based on an engraving by Francesco Rosselli, showing Borgo Pinti visible behind SS. Annunziata and the Ospedale degli Innocenti. c.1490–1510. Woodcut, 57.8 by 131.6 cm. (Kupferstichkabinett der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin– Preußischer Kulturbesitz; photograph Jörg P. Anders).
Attributed works:
20. Roman consul. First century AD, with later restorations. Marble. (Palazzo Gondi, Florence).
Attributed works:
21. Three female figures with four putti, attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490. Pen and ink, with brown wash, heightened with lead white partly oxidised, on an orange-red ground on paper, 27.2 by 40.1 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
22. Allegory of abundance or autumn, by Sandro Botticelli. c.1480–85. Pen and brown ink, with brown wash, heightened with white, over black and red chalk on an orange-red ground on paper, 31.7 by 25.2 cm. (British Museum, London).
Attributed works:
23. The rape of Europa, by Giovanni Francesco Rustici. c.1495. Glazed terracotta, 32.7 by 40.3 by 5 cm. (Victoria and Albert Museum, London).
Attributed works:
24. The rape of Europa, by the workshop of Filippino Lippi. c.1495. Black chalk with white heightening on paper, 14.5 by 15.6 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
25. Acquaio, by Simone Mosca. 1527–34. Sandstone (pietra serena), height 495.3 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
26. Europa, formerly attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo, now attributed to Raffaellino del Garbo. c.1495. Pen, iron gall ink and white lead on paper, 14 by 19.3 cm. (Biblioteca Ambrosiana, Milan).
Attributed works:
27. Killing of a bull, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513, Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
27. Killing of a bull, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513, Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
29. Studies of Ionic capitals, by Antonio da Sangallo the Younger. c.1530–45. Pen and brown ink on paper, 35.7 by 28.7 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
3. Plan of a proposed Medici villa on via Laura, Florence, by Giuliano da Sangallo and Antonio da Sangallo the Elder, with Borgo Pinti running vertically on the right-hand side, inscribed ‘via dapintti’ and the Casa Sangallo to the right of ‘via’, c.1512–15. Black chalk, pen and ink, brush and ink washes on paper, 69.4 by 63.9 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe delle Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence, hereafter GDSU; inv. no.282 A).
Attributed works:
3. Plan of a proposed Medici villa on via Laura, Florence, by Giuliano da Sangallo and Antonio da Sangallo the Elder, with Borgo Pinti running vertically on the right-hand side, inscribed ‘via dapintti’ and the Casa Sangallo to the right of ‘via’, c.1512–15. Black chalk, pen and ink, brush and ink washes on paper, 69.4 by 63.9 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe delle Gallerie degli Uffizi, Florence, hereafter GDSU; inv. no.282 A).
Attributed works:
30. Study of an ancient vault in Rome, by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1513. Pen and ink on paper. (Biblioteca Comunale degli Intronati, Siena).
Attributed works:
31. Crucifix, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–40. Wood, 184 by 178 cm. (S. Maria Nuova, Florence; photograph courtesy Gianluca Amato).
Attributed works:
32. Cosimo de’ Medici with Florentine artists, by Giorgio Vasari. 1550s. Fresco. (Palazzo della Signoria, Florence).
Attributed works:
33. Preparatory design for the cenotaph of John Hawkwood, by Paolo Uccello. c.1433–36. Silverpoint heightened in white on a prepared light green ground, squared with a stylus for transfer, on paper, 46.1 by 33.3 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
34. Virgin with the Christ Child, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1540–45. Terracotta, 84 by 98.5 by 20 cm. (Skulpturensammlung und Museum für Byzantinische Kunst, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin; photograph Jörg P. Anders).
Attributed works:
35. Self-portrait, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1570. Bronze, diameter 9.65 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
36. St John baptising, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–38. Bronze, height 53 cm. (Frick Collection, New York).
Attributed works:
37. Design for the high altar of Florence Cathedral, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1546. Pen and brown ink on paper, 22.5 by 27.4 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
38. Virgin and Child with St Anne, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1522–26. Marble. (Orsanmichele, Florence; Scala Archives).
Attributed works:
39. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1550–60. Marble, height 76 cm. (Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence).
Attributed works:
4. Detail of a ground plan of a house, possibly a design for the Casa Sangallo, attributed to Francesco da Sangallo. c.1510–40. Black chalk on paper. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
40. Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1570. Bronze, diameter 9.29 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Attributed works:
41. Design for an equestrian monument to Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1540–60. Pen and ink on paper, 24.8 by 24.4 cm. (GDSU, Florence).
Attributed works:
42. Astrology, by Giambologna. c.1575. Red wax, height 14.6 cm. (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York).
Attributed works:
5. Ground plan of the Casa Sangallo before 1576. (Alexander Röstel and Marta Castellini, based on a plan by Gianluca Belli, 2017).
Attributed works:
6. Palazzo Ximenes-Panciatichi, formerly the Casa Sangallo, Borgo Pinti, Florence.
Attributed works:
7. Detail of Nova pulcherrimae civitatis Florentiae topographia accuratissime delineata, by Stefano Buonsignori, showing the Sangallo property above the number 180. 1584. Etching. (Museo di Palazzo Vecchio, Florence).
Attributed works:
8. Barrel vault in the Salone di Leone X, Villa Medici, Poggio a Caiano, designed by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1510. (Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
9. Barrel vault in the Palazzo Ximenes-Panciatichi, Florence, designed by Giuliano da Sangallo. c.1490–1500. Stucco. (Photograph the author).
Attributed works:
the listing is known. The contents of the scrittoio can therefore only be reconstructed tentatively. Drawings, such as those in the Codex Geymüller, initiated by Antonio the Elder and expanded by Francesco well into the 1540s, were probably stored there, and these might have included works by other artists.202 The Codex Barberiniano (Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana), a folio volume of architectural drawings by Giuliano later annotated by Francesco, is first documented in the collection of Benedetto di Bartolomeo Gondi in 1609, just a few years after the sale of the Casa Sangallo.203 Like the existence of copies of the drawings in the Codex Barberiniano, this provenance suggests that architectural drawings by the Sangallos became coveted items for collectors and practitioners alike. It is known, for example, that Lorenzo Sirigatti, who published a book on perspective in 1596, owned a ‘framed perspectival drawing by Sangallo’.204 Francesco’s only securely attributed bronze sculpture is St John baptising, made for the holy water font of S. Maria delle Carceri, the centrally-planned church in Prato designed by his father (Fig.36).205 His second will indicates that he owned many more, mingled with ancient examples, but none has been securely identified.206 In addition to bronze sculptures, the scrittoio collection to Francesco, see Tomasso XXV: A Celebration of Notable Sales, London 2018, pp.58–59. 207 On Francesco’s medallic selfportraits, see Donetti, op. cit. (note 60), pp.103–21; see also Middeldorf, op. cit. (note 68), pp.124–28 and 138. 208 Donetti, op. cit. (note 60), p.106. For an example of the medal dated 1551 with Francesco on the obverse and his wife on the reverse, see Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence, inv. no.6233. 209 I. Lavin: ‘Divine grace and the remedy of the imperfect: Michelangelo’s signature on the St Peter’s Pietà’, Artibus et historiae 34 (2013), pp.277–328. 210 For an overview, including a partial translation of the Martelli letters, see P. Attwood: Italian Medals c.1530–1600 in British Public Collections, London 2003, I, pp.330–34, II, pls.166–72; for a complete transcription, see Waldman, op. cit. (note 182), pp.103–04. See also Donetti, op. cit. (note 19), pp.89–90. 211 For references to books owned by artists of the Florentine Renaissance, see Carl, op. cit. (note 200); D. Covi: ‘Four new documents concerning Andrea del Verrocchio’, Art Bulletin 48 (1966), pp.97–103; A. Decaria: ‘Un copista di classici italiani e i libri di Luca della Robbia’, Rinascimento 47 (2007), pp.243–87; and Z. Sarnecka: ‘Luca della Robbia and his books: the Renaissance artist as devotee’, Artibus et historiae 37 (2016), pp.291–301. See also F. Ames- Lewis: The Intellectual Life of the Early Renaissance Artist, New Haven and London 2000. 212 For the unlikely possibility that Giuliano and Francesco da Sangallo owned, annotated and illustrated a copy of the editio princeps of Cristoforo Landino’s commentary on Dante’s Divine Comedy in the Biblioteca Vallicelliana, Rome, see Degenhart, op. cit. (note 38), pp.101– 287; and Gamberini, op. cit. (note 185), pp.169–91, at p.174. For copies of Pliny’s Natural History available in fifteenth-century Florence, see R. Brennan: ‘Between Pliny and the trecento: Ghiberti on the history of painting’, in F. Jonietz, W.-D. Löhr and A. Nova, eds: Ghiberti Teorico: Natura, arte e coscienza storica nel Quattrocento, Milan 2019, pp.43–60, at p.43, note 12. 36. St John baptising, by Francesco da Sangallo. c.1535–38. Bronze, height 53 cm. (Frick Collection, New York).
Western art unattributed:
16. Five masters of the Florentine Renaissance. c.1490–1510. Oil on wood, 65.5 by 213 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris).
Book Review
Die erneuernde Kraft der Tradition: Spätmittelalterliche Schatz- und Ausstattungsobjekte des Halberstädter Doms. By Patricia Strohmaier
02/2020 | 1403 | 162
Pages: 165-166
related names
Reviewer:
Westermann-Angerhausen, Hiltrud (Westermann-Angerhausen, Hiltrud; Angerhausen, Hiltrud Westermann-)
Subjects
dates:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Die erneuernde Kraft der Tradition: Spätmittelalterliche Schatz- und Ausstattungsobjekte des Halberstädter Doms By Patricia Strohmaier. 192 pp. incl. 57 col. + 43 b. & w. ills. (Deutscher Verlag für Kunstgeschichte, Berlin, 2019), £80. ISBN 978–3–87157–250–0. | :
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
2. Skull-reliquary of Charlemagne, known as the Karlspokal. Cut-glass cup, 9th–10th century, silver-gilt mounting with niello and enamel, including a miniature bust of Charlemagne, c.1343. Overall height 42.9 cm. (Halberstadt Cathedral Treasury).
Exhibition Review
Forged in Fire: Bronze Sculpture in Florence under the Last Medici Palazzo Pitti, Florence
12/2019 | 1401 | 161
Pages: 1044-1047
related names
Author:
Avery, Charles (Avery, Charles)
Subjects
dates:
media:
museums and institutions:
places:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
14. Louis XIII of France on horseback, by Pietro Tacca. c.1615–18. Bronze, height 68 cm. (Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence; exh. Palazzo Pitti, Florence).
Attributed works:
16. Study for a decorative component for the poop of a galley, by Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi. c.1695. Black chalk, pen and brown ink on paper, 25.8 by 43.2 cm. (Gabinetto dei Disegni e delle Stampe, Uffizi, Florence, inv. no.124361, verso; exh. Palazzo Pitti, Florence).
Attributed works:
Opposite 15. Sacrifice of Isaac, by Giuseppe Piamontini. 1722. Bronze, height 65 cm. (Etro Collection, Milan; exh. Palazzo Pitti, Florence).
Article
‘The big Italian’: Giambologna and his model Bartolommeo di Lionardo Ginori
11/2018 | 1388 | 160
Pages: 912-919
related names
Author:
Avery, Charles (Avery, Charles)
Subjects
art literature:
dates:
museums and institutions:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Rape of the Sabines, by Giambologna. 1582. Marble, height (excluding the base) c.410 cm. (Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
10. Prometheus, cast from a model by Giambologna. c.1590. Gilt bronze, height 23 cm. (Private collection; photograph courtesy Tomasso Brothers Fine Art, UK).
Attributed works:
2. Crucified Christ, by Giambologna. 1580s. Bronze, 33.5 by 21.5 cm (Cleveland Museum of Art; Bridgeman Images).
Attributed works:
3. Portrait of Giambologna, with his model for ‘Samson and a Philistine’, by Federigo Zuccaro. 1575. Black and red chalk, 26.1 by 188 cm. (National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh).
Attributed works:
4. Rape of the Sabines, by Giambologna. c.1581. Clay with traces of whitewash, height c.410 cm. (Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence).
Attributed works:
5. Mars, by Giambologna. c.1581–87. Gilt bronze, height 39.4 cm. (Staatliche Kunstsammlung, Dresden; photograph Arrigo Coppitz).
Attributed works:
6. Portrait of Bartolommeo di Lionardo Ginori, by Santi di Tito. c.1583. Canvas, height c.250 cm. (Private collection, Florence; photo Galleria dell’Accademia, Florence).
Attributed works:
7. Portrait of Pietro di Cosimo de’ Medici, by Santi di Tito. c.1583. Canvas, 208 by 113 cm. (Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence).
Attributed works:
8. Mars and Prometheus, cast from models by Giambologna. c.1587 and c.1590 respectively. Bronze, heights 39.4 cm. and 23 cm. (Both private collection; photograph courtesy Tomasso Brothers Fine Art, UK).
Attributed works:
9. Man seen from three angles, by Antonio del Pollaiuolo. Fifteenth century. Stylus, pen and ink and wash on paper, 26.5 by 36 cm. (Musée du Louvre, Paris).
Article
Giovanni Francesco Arrighi: a newly discovered account book
10/2018 | 1387 | 160
Pages: 824-832
related names
Author:
Montagu, Jennifer (Montagu, Jennifer)
Subjects
museums and institutions:
places:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
1. Reliquary, by Giovanni Francesco Arrighi. 1722. Silver, height 120 cm. (S. Maria di Monserrato, Rome).
Attributed works:
2. Reliquary, by Giovanni Francesco Arrighi. 1727/28. Silver, height 77 cm. (Museo Diocesano, Jesi).
Attributed works:
3. Above Detail of Fig.4.
Attributed works:
4. Right Crucifix, by Giovanni Giardini. c.1706. Bronze, ebony and ivory, height 230 cm. (Notre-Dame, Paris).
Attributed works:
5. Detail of Pietà, by Giovanni Giardini. 1688–1702. Gilt bronze on velvet, 54.5 by 33.5 cm. (Private collection; photograph Sotheby’s, London).
Attributed works:
6. The Agony in the garden, after Angelo de Rossi, attributed to Giovanni Francesco Arrighi. c.1700. Copper, 53 by 46.5 cm. (National Gallery of Art, Washington).
Article
Giovanni Bandini's bronze Crucifix and candlesticks made for Urbino Cathedral
11/2016 | 1364 | 158
Pages: 870-878
related names
Author:
Principi, Lorenzo (Principi, Lorenzo)
Subjects
dates:
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
10. Detail of a candlestick illustrated in Fig.8
Attributed works:
11. Detail of a candlestick illustrated in Fig.8
Attributed works:
12. Detail of a candlestick illustrated in Fig.8
Attributed works:
13. Detail of Fig.9
Attributed works:
14. Detail of Fig.17
Attributed works:
15. Detail of Fig.9
Attributed works:
16. Detail of Fig.17
Attributed works:
17. Detail of the Pietà, by Giovanni Bandini. 1585-88 (Oratorio della Grotta, Urbino)
Attributed works:
18. Crucifix, by Giovanni Bandini. 1579-89 (S. Marco, Florence)
Attributed works:
19. Detail of The Last Supper, by Federico Barocci. 1590-99 (Cathedral of S. Maria Assunta, Urbino)
Attributed works:
8. Crucifix and a set of six candlesticks, by Giovanni Bandini. 1589-92 (Museo Diocesano Albani, Urbino)
Attributed works:
9. Detail of the Crucifix illustrated in Fig.8
Letter
The Cloisters Cross
07/2014 | 1336 | 156
Pages: 464
related names
Author:
Stratford, Neil (Stratford, Neil)
Subjects
museums and institutions:
Illustrations
Western art unattributed:
54. Initial 'L' to St Matthew's Gospel, with the Four Evangelists. Frontispiece to a gospel book, probably made for the abbey of Le Parc at Louvain, mid-twelfth century (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge)
Article
New documents for Algardi’s Alamandini ‘Crucifix’, ‘a beautiful and famous thing’
11/2013 | 1328 | 155
Pages: 769-773
related names
Author:
Mazzarelli, Carla (Mazzarelli, Carla)
Subjects
dates:
subjects:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
28. Crucifix, by Alessandro Algardi (Chapel of the Palace of the Governatorato, formerly in S.Marta, Vatican City)
Attributed works:
29. Crucifix, by Alessandro Algardi (Cappella Franzone, SS. Vittore e Carlo, Genoa)
Attributed works:
30. Crucifix, by Paolo Sanquirico, from a model by Prospero Antichi (Cappella Sacchetti, S. Giovanni dei Fiorentini, Rome)
Attributed works:
31. Detail of Fig.28
Attributed works:
32. Detail of St Philip Neri, by Alessandro Algardi (Sacristy of S. Maria in Vallicella, Rome)
Article
Eighteenth-century Roman silver for the chapel of St John the Baptist in the church of S. Roque, Lisbon
08/2010 | 1289 | 152
Pages: 528-535
related names
Author:
Vale, Teresa Leonor M. (Vale, Teresa Leonor M.)
Subjects
dates:
places:
places:
places:
print:
subjects:
Illustrations
Attributed works:
20. Baldachin, by Felice Sciffone, Agostino Ancidoni and Lucino Celladini; altar frontal, by Antonio Arrighi; and altar set (six candlesticks and cross), by Angelo Spinazzi, Giovanni Felice Sanini, Tommaso Politi and Francesco Antonio Salci. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
21. Detail of altar frontal in Fig.20. c.1744–50. Silver and lapis lazuli, 112 by 230 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
22. Candlestick, by Giuseppe and Leandro Gagliardi. c.1744–49. Gilt silver, 285 by 105 by 105 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
23. Chalice, by Antonio Gigli. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 29 cm. high. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
24. Set of three altar canons, by Antonio Vendetti. c.1744–50. White and gilt silver, 49 by 53 by 9.5 cm.; 42 by 33 by 6 cm.; 42 by 33 by 6 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
25. Pair of cruets and salver, by Antonio Gigli. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 17.8 by 12 by 6.3 cm. (cruets); 21.2 by 27.5 cm. (salver). (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
26. Basin and ewer, by Vincenzo Belli. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 28.5 by 14 by 13.5 cm. (ewer); 42.5 by 54 by 4 cm. (basin). (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
27. Host box, by Francesco Smitti. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 8 by 9 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
28. St Prosper reliquary, by Carlo Guarnieri. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 89 by 43 by 35 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Attributed works:
29. St Felix reliquary, by Carlo Guarnieri. c.1744–50. Gilt silver, 81 by 30 by 34 cm. (Museu de S. Roque, Lisbon).
Publication Received
Il Crocefisso di Santo Spirito/ The Crucifix of Santo Spirito
07/2001 | 1180 | 143
Pages: 439
Subjects
artists:
Reviewed Items
subjects:
Il Crocefisso di Santo Spirito/ The Crucifix of Santo Spirito | :
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