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The Preaching of John the Baptist

The Preaching of John the Baptist

Copy after: Andrea del Sarto (Andrea d’Agnolo) (in circa 1526-1600)

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Specifications

Title The Preaching of John the Baptist
Material and technique Red chalk
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 229 mm
Width 318 mm
Artists Copy after: Andrea del Sarto (Andrea d’Agnolo)
Previously attributed: Giovanni Battista Naldini
Accession number I 114 recto (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1526-1600
Watermark Ladder in shield with a Latin cross on top (74 x 45 mm, on P4 of 8P), very similar to Briquet 5930 (90 x 50 mm; Fabriano 1548, Lucca 1560), but smaller
Inscriptions 'N:o 63=' (removed mount, above centre, pen and purple ink), ‘Andrea del Sarto / Firenze’ (removed mount, below right, pencil); ‘n. 76897’ (removed mount, below right, pencil)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Provenance Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, acquired in 1926 ( Andrea del Sarto); D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions Rotterdam 2009 (coll 2 kw 3)
Internal exhibitions De Collectie Twee - wissel III, Prenten & Tekeningen (2009)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Frölich-Bum 1928, pp. 167-168 (Del Sarto); Fraenckel 1935, pp. 195-196, no. 3 (copy after Del Sarto); Berenson 1938, no. 1761 A (Naldini); Berenson 1961, no. 1766 A-2 (Naldini); Freedberg 1963, p. 15; Barocchi 1965, p. 246, fig. 90d (Morandini); Shearman 1965, pp. 295-296 (copy late 17th or early 18th c.); Monbeig Goguel 2005, p. 398 (G.B. Vanni)
Material
Object
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Klazina Botke

Between 1508/1512 and 1526, Andrea del Sarto, working with Franciabigio (1482-1525), created twelve monochrome murals in the covered cloister of the Chiostro dello Scalzo. The frescoes depict scenes from the life of John the Baptist and are described at length in the second edition of Vasari’s Lives (1568), in which he explains how Del Sarto used several figures from the work of Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528) for The Baptist Preaching to the Crowds.[1] The woman with a child on her lap and the dignified man on the right-hand side, dressed in a long robe, were both borrowed from prints by the admired German artist.[2]

This red chalk drawing is a copy after the fresco. We see John standing on an elevation in a landscape, surrounded by a crowd of onlookers listening enthralled to his words: ‘Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.’[3] On the verso of the sheet there are less worked out versions of a number of these figures. Many copies of the frescoes in the Chiostro dello Scalzo were drawn during the sixteenth century, including The Preaching of John the Baptist by Giovanni Battista Naldini (1535-1591), now in Florence.[4] Whereas most copyists tried to follow Andrea del Sarto’s original as faithfully as possible, the maker of the Rotterdam drawing deliberately departed from it. There are clear pentimenti, particularly in the pose of the principal figure, who looks in a different direction, with a variation of the right arm sweeping out to one side, while the kneeling figure in the left background has been omitted. John is shown in the same position on the verso, in combination with alternative poses for other figures in the fresco. Shearman (1965) posits that the differences between the drawing and the fresco, which are also seen in a second sheet by the same hand in Rotterdam (I 113), point to forgeries; the pentimenti would have been specifically designed to make the drawing look like a genuine preliminary study in Del Sarto’s own hand.[5] It is possible, though, that the now anonymous artist was using the frescoes as an aid in trying out poses and perhaps using the composition as a basis for his own inventions.[6]

Footnotes

[1] Vasari-Milanesi 1906, vol. 5, p. 22.   

[2] Shearman 1965, p. 300; Gregory 2012, pp. 233-35. The woman and child are taken from the woodcut The Birth of the Virgin (c.1503; Bartsch VII.131.80), the man on the right from the engraving Ecce Homo (1512; Bartsch VII.36.10).

[3] Matthew 3:1-12.

[4] Gallerie degli Uffizi, inv. 646 E.; Petrioli Tofani 1986, p. 286, ill.

[5] Shearman 1965, pp. 295-96. This sheet, along with inv. I 113 and a third drawing by the same hand, now in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow (I 112), were acquired by Koenigs as a work by Andrea del Sarto himself.

[6] For an extensive history of attributions see inv. I 113.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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All about the artist

Andrea del Sarto (Andrea d’Agnolo)

Florence 1486 - Florence 1530

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