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Volume  Volume1\Studies and Sketches for Pictures and Decorations

Entry#  663.


 Contents: Vol. 1  |  Vol. 2

 

On Madonna pictures.


In the autumn of  1478 I began the two Madonna pictures .


Footnote: Photographs of this page have been published by BRAUN,

No. 439, and PHILPOT, No. 718.


1. _Incominciai_. We have no other information as to the two

pictures of the Madonna here spoken of. As Leonardo here tells us

that he had begun two Madonnas at the same time, the word

'_incominciai_' may be understood to mean that he had begun at the

same time preparatory studies for two pictures to be painted later.

If this is so, the non-existence of the pictures may be explained by

supposing that they were only planned and never executed. I may here

mention a few studies for pictures of the Madonna which probably

belong to this early time; particularly a drawing in silver-point on

bluish tinted paper at Windsor--see Pl. XL, No. 3--, a drawing of

which the details have almost disappeared in the original but have

been rendered quite distinct in the reproduction; secondly a slight

pen and ink sketch in, the Codex VALLARDI, in the Louvre, fol. 64,

No. 2316; again a silver point drawing of a Virgin and child drawn

over again with the pen in the His de la Salle collection also in

the Louvre, No. 101. (See Vicomte BOTH DE TAUZIA, _Notice des

dessins de la collection His de la Salle, exposes au Louvre_. Paris

1881, pp. 80, 81.) This drawing is, it is true, traditionally

ascribed to Raphael, but the author of the catalogue very justly

points out its great resemblance with the sketches for Madonnas in

the British Museum which are indisputably Leonardo's. Some of these

have been published by Mr. HENRY WALLIS in the Art Journal, New Ser.

No. 14, Feb. 1882. If the non-existence of the two pictures here

alluded to justifies my hypothesis that only studies for such

pictures are meant by the text, it may also be supposed that the

drawings were made for some comrade in VERROCCHIO'S atelier. (See

VASARI, Sansoni's ed. Florence 1880. Vol. IV, p. 564): "_E perche a

Lerenzo piaceva fuor di modo la maniera di Lionardo, la seppe cosi

bene imitare, che niuno fu che nella pulitezza e nel finir l'opere

con diligenza l'imitasse più di lui_." Leonardo's notes give me no

opportunity of discussing the pictures executed by him in Florence,

before he moved to Milan. So the studies for the unfinished picture

of the Adoration of the Magi--in the Uffizi, Florence--cannot be

described here, nor would any discussion about the picture in the

Louvre "_La Vierge aux Rochers_" be appropriate in the absence of

all allusion to it in the MSS. Therefore, when I presently add a few

remarks on this painting in explanation of the Master's drawings for

it, it will be not merely with a view to facilitate critical

researches about the picture now in the National Gallery, London,

which by some critics has been pronounced to be a replica of the

Louvre picture, but also because I take this opportunity of

publishing several finished studies of the Master's which, even if

they were not made in Florence but later in Milan, must have been

prior to the painting of the Last Supper. The original picture in

Paris is at present so disfigured by dust and varnish that the

current reproductions in photography actually give evidence more of

the injuries to which the picture has been exposed than of the

original work itself. The wood-cut given on p. 344, is only intended

to give a general notion of the composition. It must be understood

that the outline and expression of the heads, which in the picture

is obscured but not destroyed, is here altogether missed. The

facsimiles which follow are from drawings which appear to me to be

studies for "_La Vierge aux Rochers_."


1. A drawing in silver point on brown toned paper of a woman's head

looking to the left. In the Royal Library at Turin, apparently a

study from nature for the Angel's head (Pl. XLII).


2. A study of drapery for the left leg of the same figure, done with

the brush, Indian ink on greenish paper, the lights heightened with

white.


The original is at Windsor, No. 223. The reproduction Pl. XLIII is

defective in the shadow on the upper part of the thigh, which is not

so deep as in the original; it should also be observed that the

folds of the drapery near the hips are somewhat altered in the

finished work in the Louvre, while the London copy shows a greater

resemblance to this study in that particular.


3. A study in red chalk for the bust of the Infant Christ--No. 3 in

the Windsor collection (Pl. XLIV). The well-known silver-point

drawing on pale green paper, in the Louvre, of a boy's head (No. 363

in REISET, _Notice des dessins, Ecoles d'Italie_) seems to me to be

a slightly altered copy, either from the original picture or from

this red chalk study.


4. A silver-point study on greenish paper, for the head of John the

Baptist, reproduced on p. 342. This was formerly in the Codex

Vallardi and is now exhibited among the drawings in the Louvre. The

lights are, in the original, heightened with white; the outlines,

particularly round the head and ear, are visibly restored.


There is a study of an outstretched hand--No. 288 in the Windsor

collection--which was published in the Grosvenor Gallery

Publication, 1878, simply under the title of: "No. 72 Study of a

hand, pointing" which, on the other hand, I regard as a copy by a

pupil. The action occurs in the kneeling angel of the Paris picture

and not in the London copy.


These four genuine studies form, I believe, a valuable substitute in

the absence of any MS. notes referring to the celebrated Paris

picture.

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