A Velázquez in the Cellar?
Sorting through old canvases in a storeroom, a Yale curator discovered a painting believed to be by the Spanish master
- By Jamie Katz
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2011, Subscribe
John Marciari first spotted the painting among hundreds of other works carefully filed in pullout racks in a soulless cube of a storage facility in New Haven, Connecticut. He was then, in 2004, a junior curator at Yale University’s renowned Art Gallery, reviewing holdings that had been warehoused during its expansion and renovation. In the midst of that task, he came upon an intriguing but damaged canvas, more than five feet tall and four feet wide, which depicted St. Anne teaching the young Virgin Mary to read. It was set aside, identified only as “Anonymous, Spanish School, seventeenth century.”
“I pulled it out, and I thought, ‘This is a good picture. Who did this?’” says Marciari, 39, now curator of European art and head of provenance research at the San Diego Museum of Art. “I thought this was one of those problems that just had to be solved. It seemed so distinctive, by an artist of enough quality to have his own personality. It was an attributable picture, to use the term that art historians use.”
Marciari returned the rack to its slot and went on with other things. But he was intrigued. He learned that it had sat for many years, largely overlooked, in the basement of Yale’s Swartwout building—a “perfectly respectable museum storeroom,” he says. “It’s not as though Yale was keeping this in the steam cellar.”
Marciari found himself returning to the storage facility every week or two to study the canvas. Then, a few months after the first viewing, he pulled it out and studied it some more. “And the penny dropped, the light bulb went on, the angels started singing,” he says. “The whole moment of epiphany where you say, wait a minute—wait, wait, wait. I know exactly what this is. This looks like early Velázquez!”
A flood of associations involving the 17th-century Spanish master Diego Velázquez came to mind—images Marciari knew from his academic work, museum pilgrimages and classes he had taught in early Baroque art. “This is the drapery from the Saint Thomas in Orléans,” he realized, with gathering excitement. “It’s like the Old Woman Cooking Eggs at Edinburgh, the Kitchen Scene in Chicago and Martha and Mary in London. All of it was familiar—the color palette, the way the figures emerged from the darkness, the particulars of the still-life elements, the way the draperies folded.” But it just couldn’t be, he thought. “I must be insane. There’s no way I just found a Velázquez in a storeroom.”
His caution was well founded. It’s one thing to form an intelligent hunch and quite another to satisfy Velázquez scholars and the international art community. This wasn’t a ceramic pot on “Antiques Roadshow.” It was potentially a landmark work by a towering figure who had changed the course of Western art and whose paintings are treasured by the world’s leading museums. Velázquez’s known works number in the low hundreds at most; their identification has led to controversy in the past. (In recent months, New York City’s Metropolitan Museum of Art generated headlines when it reattributed a portrait of Spain’s King Philip IV to Velázquez after having demoted it, in effect, 38 years earlier.) Nonetheless, Marciari had formed his hypothesis and resolved to plunge ahead. “Despite my initial doubts and the seeming impossibility, I think I felt pretty sure,” he says, “although with a great deal of anxiety.”
The first person he consulted was his wife, Julia Marciari-Alexander, an art historian specializing in British art.
“I put a picture in front of her and said, ‘What do you think of this?’ She doesn’t like playing that game. But she had just been in Edinburgh about a month before and had spent a great deal of time standing in front of Old Woman Cooking Eggs. And so she looked at it, and she said, ‘You know, that looks just like the Velázquez in Edinburgh.’”
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Related topics: Painting Painters Schools and Universities
Additional Sources
“Rediscovering Velazquez” by John Marciari, ars, Number 7, July-September 2010
“The Velazquez in the basement: A curator tells how it feels to discover a masterpiece” by John Marciari, Yale Alumni Magazine, September/October 2010









Comments (9)
I published a 2 Volume book (880 pgs.) on Velázquez just a year ago, following 40 years of research on this painter. See www.velazquezmonographie.de.
The painting in question is not by de Silva Velázquez, but the artist knew (or knows) Vz' early works well. Some details even look like quotations, but this is in his case one more argument of not attributing the painting to him.
Posted by wolf moser on January 26,2012 | 12:03 PM
I read with great interest the article in the April, 2011 issue about the painting recently discovered in the Yale University cellar. It is obvious that John Marciari took great pains to investigate the discovery before he went public with the news.
But then I read the comments by Jonathan Brown of the New York University. It is obvious that Mr Brown is a rather self important art "critic" and one has to wonder what his position would be if he had been the one to discover this painting in the cellar of the New York University.
Mr. Brown, your bias/jealousy is a bit too obvious and shows in your comment "For what it's worth..."
Posted by Jim Dickie on April 27,2011 | 05:59 PM
That John Marciari is capable of running ultramarathons is quite believable, but his interpretation of "The Education of the Virgin" is a bit too breathless. Could Velazquez (or any other artist painting in the 1620s) so confidently anticipate the pontification (Pius IX) of 1854 that he/she would playfully extrapolate omniscience from immaculateness?
Mother Anne appears equally distracted, her "pointer" wandering down the page, her eyes gazing elsewhere.
Might the ladies' expressions be signalling that their male companion has (once again!) said something inappropriate?
Posted by Robert Rose on April 21,2011 | 09:45 AM
Probably not Velasquez. Another mystery find by another Museum to bring in more money. Another 'find' like the Van Gogh of last year. Happens almost very year.
Posted by Jocko on April 16,2011 | 03:41 PM
If I remember my second grade religion class, it was not Mary who was conceived by Divine Intervention. Mary conceived the Christ child, Jesus, without benefit of spousal partner. She is known as the Immaculate Mother in Catholic tradition. Whether or not she "was born with full knowledge and foresight of the events of her and her son's life" and already knew how to read was never mentioned by the nuns.I believe this needs some clarification.
Posted by Patricia Parker on April 12,2011 | 06:59 PM
I have reviewed many Velazques painting in my travels including the extensive collection at the Prado Museum. It would appear to me that characteristics reflected in this wonderful find are Velasquez.
Posted by John Hindinger on April 3,2011 | 10:56 AM
I'm not convinced either way; the posing of the characters, each directing their gaze towards a completely different focal point with one faded figure in the background either peeking in or gazing back at the viewer while exiting the scene are spot on Velasquez, yet the detail in the hair of the man just isn't there at all. Maybe it's the extensive "damage" that removed some top layers of paint. The author shouldn't refer to this wreck as "The Velasquez" just yet!
Posted by Deborah Taylor on March 29,2011 | 11:53 PM
How wonderful that John Maricari recognized the greatness that he was seeing! Thanks...
Posted by Angela Purcell on March 29,2011 | 04:26 PM
WOW !!! What a find. It really looks like the rest of the artist's works.
Posted by Mary Briggs on March 25,2011 | 01:14 PM