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Volume  Volume2\Topographical

Entry#  1057. The Alps (1057-1062).


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The Alps (1057-1062).


At Monbracco, above Saluzzo,--a mile above the Certosa, at the foot

of Monte Viso, there is a quarry of flakey stone, which is as white

as Carrara marble, without a spot, and as hard as porphyry or even

harder; of which my worthy gossip, Master Benedetto the sculptor,

has promised to give me a small slab, for the colours, the second

day of January 1511.


Footnote: Saluzzo at the foot of the Alps South of Turin.  


Footnote 9. 10.: _Maestro Benedetto scultore_; probably some native

of Northern Italy acquainted with the place here described. Hardly

the Florentine sculptor Benedetto da Majano. Amoretti had published

this passage, and M. Ravaisson who gave a French translation of it

in the _Gazette des Beaux Arts_ (1881, pag. 528), remarks as

follows: _Le maitre sculpteur que Leonard appelle son "compare" ne

serait-il pas Benedetto da Majano, un de ceux qui jugerent avec lui

de la place a donner au David de Michel-Ange, et de qui le Louvre a

acquis recemment un buste d'apres Philippe Strozzi?_ To this it may

be objected that Benedetto da Majano had already lain in his grave

fourteen years, in the year 1511, when he is supposed to have given

the promise to Leonardo. The colours may have been given to the

sculptor Benedetto and the stone may have been in payment for them.

>From the description of the stone here given we may conclude that it

is repeated from hearsay of the sculptor's account of it. I do not

understand how, from this observation, it is possible to conclude

that Leonardo was on the spot.  


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