Looking for Leonardo
Are figures in a Florentine altar panel attributed to Italian artist Andrea del Verrocchio actually by Leonardo da Vinci?
- By Ann Landi
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Documentary evidence suggests that Leonardo worked on many sculptural projects, even completing a 24-foot-tall clay model for a bronze horse, but none has survived. (Neither Radke nor Kemp has seen the terra-cotta bust in the palazzo in person, but both doubt the attribution. It lacks "the attention to naturalistic details I associate with Leonardo," says Radke.) The Baptistery figures, if accepted as Leonardo's, would be the only extant sculptures made in the artist's lifetime (a sculpture of a horse, thought to have been cast from a lost model after his death, is in the exhibition). Making an attribution stick when there's little with which to compare a work and when there is no paper trail—a bill of sale, preparatory sketches, a reference in a letter—is not easy.
Renaissance studies are littered with bad judgments and outright scandal. Attributions by the scholar Bernard Berenson, who died in 1959, have been overturned (and there have been allegations that Berenson colluded with art dealers for his own profit). In 1987, Frederick Hartt, an authority on Renaissance sculpture at the University of Virginia, pronounced as genuine a small plaster study for Michelangelo's David in which, it turned out, he had a financial interest. Few scholars have seen the statue, which is in a bank vault until litigation is resolved, and the attribution remains in limbo. In 1995, New York University art historian Kathleen Weil-Garris Brandt announced she had discovered a marble statue by the youthful Michelangelo, hidden in plain sight at the French Embassy's cultural offices in New York City. Several experts quickly repudiated the claim and current opinion remains divided. (Young Archer, as the statue is known, will go on exhibition in November as an object lesson in the challenge of attribution, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan.)
Aware of such controversies, Radke has proceeded with careful deliberation. In October 2008, he presented his thesis about the silver figures to colleagues at the Provo/Athens Renaissance Sculpture Conference, a quadrennial meeting of experts. Some were convinced, some not. "My main hesitation is to attach big names to works of art about which we know very little in terms of how the workshops in which they were produced functioned," says Sally Cornelison, associate professor of Italian Renaissance art at the University of Kansas. "I'm not going to say that it's not Leonardo, but I think we need to be cautious. We don't know that much about people who worked as goldsmiths and silversmiths during the Renaissance. It could just as easily be by an extremely capable but unknown artisan."
Martin Kemp, who did not attend the conference, is inclined to accept Radke's attribution on the basis of photographic evidence and the way the two "Leonardo" figures reflect light. Leonardo's handling of light was always more "painterly" and sensitive to the nuances of surface, he says, while Verrocchio tended toward the blunt and the sculptural. "What is absolutely right is that there are different hands and eyes at work in that panel," Kemp adds, but he speculates they might be Verrocchio's in the "Leonardo" figures and a lesser assistant elsewhere. Or was there another apprentice as talented as the young Leonardo?
As Radke himself notes, no contemporary attributions to a Leonardo sculpture have won unqualified acceptance. "I believe that until we discover some new written documents or other evidence, neither will the two figures in the silver altar," he says. "But what can one expect in a situation where no documented work has survived? That said, I do believe that there is more visual evidence for my attribution than any previously proposed."
Ann Landi is a contributing editor of ARTnews and the author of the Schirmer Encyclopedia of Art. She is based in New York.
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Comments (5)
One of the figures attributed in the piece to Leonardo struck me as posed very similar in style to small scale contemporaneous Hindu statury.
It makes me wonder if perhaps some of that had arrived as curios to venice from the end of an Eastern trade trail in the Levant, which was a very active trade route of the day.
Artists are known Borrowers from any source (Rembrandt- Italy, Picasso-Africa, etc.)
Posted by Mike Shepley on November 24,2009 | 06:44 PM
In regard to the article "Looking for Leonardo" in the Oct. 2009 Smithsonian magazine, the Leonardo drawing "Head of a Warrior" (a detail of which is shown in the article), which when seen in its entirety appears to relate to the decorated Helmet and the decoration of the upper body armor on the figure at the extreme right of the scene of the beheading of John the Baptist. The helmet of the drawing is more elaborate and comes to more of a point in front than the silver helmet. An interpretation of the drawing in silver on a small three dimensional figure would, of necessity, be simplified.
The silver figure wears lion's heads on both shoulders, replacing the lion head drawn by the artist just where the silver figure's hand rests on his chest. The decorative motif on the figure's breast plate is a derivative of the motif on the drawing's breast plate. I think there is a connection between the drawing and the figure that brings in the possibility of Leonardo's input in the design of the panel.
The remarks made in the article concerning the decorative elements on the two figures on the right seem to me to be irrelevant. Surely the finishing of the figures would be done not by the sculptor-modelers but by silver chasers.
Posted by E. S. on October 23,2009 | 06:36 PM
I want to konw the figure itself,maybe we could find clues in closereading.
Is it hard to imagine the relationship of the unknown figures and Leonardo?
I seconded some Mary said.
Posted by Joseph Ting on October 7,2009 | 02:11 AM
I noticed two interesting things about the youthful figure on the right hand side. For one, his head bears a striking resemblance to that of Verrocchio's David, which tradition tells us that the master used the young Leonardo as a model.So is this another portrait of a young Leonardo by Verrocchio, or a self-portrait of Leonardo?
Another interesting detail of the young figure is that his pinky fingers are bent--and foreshortened. It makes the hands more delicate, but it is also a characteristic hand pose of Leonardo's, and is very evident in his Virgin Mary paintings.
Posted by jefferson boyer on October 3,2009 | 01:56 PM
Concerning thr articles on pages 42 and 70.
The two figuers that were obviously done by the same artist are the one on the extreem left and the one kneeling .
I pay attention to minor details, like the ones that artist use that are not different with each of their works, such as anatomical features, like toes. The toes on the two I mentioned were obviously done by the same artist.
I am not questioning whether they were, or were not, done by Da Vinci.
Your organization has the facilities to look at other Da Vinci works for the crooked big toe. To put this question to rest.
Posted by Mary L Petty on September 24,2009 | 09:56 AM