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Taddeo Zuccaro Drawing by Moonlight in Calabrese's House

Taddeo Zuccaro Drawing by Moonlight in Calabrese's House

Copy after: Federico Zuccaro (in circa 1595)

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Specifications

Title Taddeo Zuccaro Drawing by Moonlight in Calabrese's House
Material and technique Black chalk, pen and brown ink, brown wash
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 263 mm
Width 159 mm
Artists Copy after: Federico Zuccaro
Accession number DN 153/50 (PK)
Credits Gift Dr A.J. Domela Nieuwenhuis, 1923
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1923
Creation date in circa 1595
Watermark None (vH, 5P)
Inscriptions 'In Casa il Calavrese' (above centre, pen and brown ink; 'v' changed to a 'b' in black chalk), '98' (below left, pen and black ink), ‘THADDAEO ZUCCHARO’ (pen and brown ink, on the jacket of the figure), 'Federig Zuccharo fec[it]' (verso, centre, pencil), 'Nota lese[m]pio qui del frattel mio / cosi si tudi, ise ce ch[..] acorta / mente di [..] io[..]' (verso, in margin, last line largely cut off), '153.' (verso, above left, pencil)
Collector Collector / Adriaan Domela Nieuwenhuis
Provenance Boguslaw Jolles (-1912, L.381), Dresden/Vienna; his sale, Munich (Helbing) 28.10.1895, lot 690 (Federico Zuccaro, DM 6,5); Dr. Adriaan J. Domela Nieuwenhuis (1850-1935, L.356b), Munich/Rotterdam, donated with his collection in 1923
Exhibitions Los Angeles 2007, p. 44, n. 27
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Parker 1956, p. 400; Kultzen 1958, pp. 97-103, fig. 12; Los Angeles 2007, p. 44, n. 27; Stemerding 2021, pp. 386-387, fig. 16
Material
Object
Technique
Brown wash > Washing > Wash > Drawing technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

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Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Surya Stemerding

This is a contemporary copy after one of the original scenes in the Life of Taddeo Zuccaro in Los Angeles.[1] The composition shows a youthful Taddeo in his night attire, drawing by the light of the moon. The young boy’s dedication to drawing is visualized in the single slipper on his foot, hastily put on in an effort to waste no time, and his sketches on the window shutters in the absence of paper. The original drawing by Federico was copied more than once, and two other contemporary copies exist in Oxford[2] and in Florence.[3]

Of the three copies, the one in Rotterdam is arguably the best. Although the contrast is less pronounced and the shadows are paler than in the original, the anonymous draughtsman of the Rotterdam sheet copied Federico’s drawing in minute detail. In general, the copies after Federico’s Taddeo series, such as the one after Taddeo Returning to Rome, which emerged on the art market six years ago,[4] lack the originals’ lively shading and strong contrasts, and they usually also tend to be rather sloppy, with inscriptions seldom copied correctly. Every element of the Rotterdam drawing, however, including the sketches on the shutters, follows the original to the dot, and even the inscriptions are almost identical. The barely visible curved lines in the lower left and right show that the drawing was originally framed in the typical dumbbell-shape of the original Taddeo series, but was later cropped to form a rectangle.[5]

Just as the palazzo’s symbolic portraits were meant to be paired with poetry, so the scenes from the Life of Taddeo were combined with short verses, written by Federico and meant to be a part of the decoration of the Sala del Disegno.[6] The text that is kept with Taddeo Drawing by Moonlight in Los Angeles recommends the viewer to follow Taddeo’s example and study the art of drawing, even by night: ‘Nota l’essempio qui del’fratel’mio / Cosi si studia, ve come discaccia / Da gl’occhi il sonno, e da se l’otio rio’ (Note here the example of my brother / How hard he studies, see how he chases away / the sleep from his eyes and harsh sloth from himself). The verso of the sheet in Rotterdam bears an inscription as well,[7] and it shows a verse very similar to the one on the drawing in Los Angeles, though not identical: ‘Nota l’esempio qui del frattel’mio / Cosi si [s]tudia, ve ce che si acorta / mente discaccia… l’...bl…[?]’ (Note here the example of my brother / How hard he studies, see what he realizes / the mind chases away…).[8]

Footnotes

[1] J. Paul Getty Museum, inv. 99.GA.6.9; Stemerding 2021, pp. 386-87, fig. 17.

[2] Ashmolean Museum, inv. WA1935.128.

[3] Gallerie degli Uffizi, inv. 11015 F; ibidem, fig. 19.

[4] New York (Christie’s) 29 January 2015, lot 27 (as Federico Zuccaro), ill.

[5] Following the dumbbell-shape, the original measurements of the drawing, before being cropped, most likely matched the measurements of the original drawing in Los Angeles. The copy sold at Christie’s (see note 4) was cropped in a similar manner.

[6] These texts attest to the idea that the cycle was intended to function as an inspiration for the young, aspiring artists housed in the Palazzo Zuccaro, since they address the viewer and advise him to follow the example set by Taddeo.

[7] The last sentence is partly lost, as the sheet was trimmed.

[8] For a more in-depth analysis of these verses and the differences, see Stemerding 2021, pp. 387-88.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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Federico Zuccaro

Sant' Angelo in Vado circa 1541 - Ancona 1609

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