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Three Scenes with Many Figures in an Architectural Surrounding

Three Scenes with Many Figures in an Architectural Surrounding

Anoniem (in circa 1352-1385)

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Specifications

Title Three Scenes with Many Figures in an Architectural Surrounding
Material and technique Pen and brown ink, on parchment
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 223 mm
Width 168 mm
Artists Artist: Anoniem
: Tomaso da Modena
Previously attributed: Altichiero da Zevio
Accession number I 1 recto (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1352-1385
Inscriptions 'F 25' (verso, below left, pencil), '3' (verso, above right)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Mark Marquis de Lagoy (L.1710), L. Galichon (L.1060), G. Strogonoff (L.550), F.W. Koenigs (L.1023a) in dorso
Provenance Marquis de Lagoy (1764-1829, L.1710)***, Aix-en-Provence; Emile Galichon (1829-1875, L.856, L.1058, L.1059), Paris; his sale, Paris (Clément) 10-14.05.1875, lot 58 (Giotto di Bondone, unsold at FF 1000, Galichon); Louis Galichon (1829-1893, L.1060), Paris; his sale Paris (Danlos) 04.03.1895, lot 76 (Giotto di Bondone, FF 700 to D[...]); Count Grégoire Stroganoff (1829-1910, L.550), Rome; his sale, Rome (Jandolo, Tavazzi) 18-23.04.1910, lot 479, pl. 5 (Giotti di Bondone); - ; Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, acquired in 1920-1930 (attributed to Ambrogio Lorenzetti, corrected to Altichiero da Zevio); D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions Paris 1879; Amsterdam 1934, no. 445; Paris 1935, no. 502; Paris/Rotterdam/Haarlem 1962, no. 2
Internal exhibitions Italiaanse tekeningen in Nederlands bezit (1962)
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Chennevières 1880, p. 8 (Giotto); Meder 1923, p. 294, fig. 400 (Lorenzetti); Coletti 1933, p. 54, pl. 63; Amsterdam 1934, no. 445, ill. (Italy, c. 1400); Paris 1935, no. 502 (Altichiero); Degenhart 1937, p. 294 (attr. Altichiero); Oertel 1940, pp. 247-48; Stix/Spitzmüller 1941, vol. 6, under no. 348 (attrib. Tommaso da Modena, c. 1358); Toesca 1951, p. 755, n. 281 (school of Verona?); Paris/Rotterdam/Haarlem 1962, vol. 1, no. 2, vol. 2, pl. 3 (anon. Verona); Coletti 1963, p. 123, no. 17, fig. 97; Degenhart/Schmitt 1968, vol. I-2, p. 641 (verso: Tommaso da Modena); Koschatzky/Oberhuber/Knab 1971, under no. 2; Meder/Ames 1978, vol. 1, pp. 138, 237, 238, 241, 246, 327, 423, 453; vol. 2, p. 10, pl. 6; Treviso 1979, p. 108, n. 52; Venice 1981, under no. 15; Byam Shaw 1983, p. 209 n. 1, under no. 207; Gibbs 1989, p. 300; Birke/Kertész 1992, vol. 1, p. 12 under no. 19; Degenhart/Schmitt 2004, vol. III-2, pp. 234-235
Material
Object
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe
Place of manufacture Verona > Veneto region > Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Rosie Razzall

The scenes on both sides of this parchment sheet are probably related to a fresco cycle, with several episodes from the narrative represented by a group of figures against an architectural backdrop. The scenes have previously been believed to be taken from the life of St Ursula, an assumption that is based on the attribution of the drawing to Tommaso da Modena (1325/1326-1379),[1] who in 1358 completed a fresco cycle of the life of St Ursula in a chapel at the church of Santa Margherita degli Eremitani in Treviso.[2] However, scholars have since raised doubts about the attribution of the drawing and the identification of the iconography, and there remain unanswered questions about the sheet.[3]

According to the legend of the saint, Ursula was the daughter of King Dionotus of Dumnoia (present day Devon, Somerset and Dorset) who travelled to Armorica (present day Brittany) accompanied by 11,000 handmaidens to meet her future husband, Conan Meriodoc. The women were all murdered at Cologne during a pilgrimage before the wedding could take place. Although the scenes on the Rotterdam sheet can be loosely compared to Tommaso da Modena’s fresco cycle, the iconography does not definitively lead us to episodes from Ursula’s legend. On the recto, a scene at top left shows an angel seated on a throne with figures on either side. The following three scenes, at top right, bottom and at the top on the verso, all depict a group of figures appealing to a seated figure on a throne, and may be different alternatives for the same subject. The bowing figure with one leg in front of the other is repeated at a smaller scale in the blank space to the lower left of the recto, and there are two other cloaked, bending figures that may be related to the same scene. The final scene on the lower half of the verso shows a figure on a throne, surrounded by seated figures arranged in a semi-circle. Because of the repetition of figures, it seems more likely that this sheet is a preparatory working-out of ideas rather than a sequence of copies from a finished fresco cycle.

The drawing is closely related to a drawing on parchment in Vienna,[4] which also has several scenes possibly showing Ursula and her father against an architectural backdrop, and a scene with another unrelated saint. The Rotterdam and Vienna sheets may have come from the same workshop pattern book. Both sheets have also been compared to a parchment sheet in Paris[5] with studies for the Annunciation, and another sheet on paper also in Paris,[6] depicting soldiers entering a castle via a drawbridge. However, the Rotterdam and Vienna drawings are not generally felt to be by the same hand as either of these two drawings. Degenhart/Schmitt recorded an inscription on the verso of the Rotterdam drawing, which they acknowledge was largely erased or illegible, and it cannot be seen on the drawing today.[7] They believed that this inscription could be related to the ‘pseudo-signatures’ and numbering that appear on pages from the taccuino di viaggio, a parchment sketchbook that circulated in the workshop of Gentile da Fabriano (1370-1427) and Pisanello (1395-1455). The inscriptions are present on the Paris and Vienna sheets, and the Rotterdam-Vienna-Paris drawings all share the same Lagoy provenance. Other proposed attributions for the Rotterdam-Vienna sheets have included Giotto (c.1267-1337) or his circle,[8] which would make the drawing even earlier than it is currently dated; Ambrogio Lorenzetti (c.1290-1348);[9] and Altichieri da Zevio (1320/1330-1385).[10] Most recently, scholars have preferred to give the sheet to an anonymous northern Italian artist.[11]

Footnotes

[1] Coletti 1933, p. 54; Stix/Spitzmüller 1941, vol. 6, under no. 348; Coletti 1963, p. 123, no. 17; Birke/Kertész 1992, vol. 1, p. 12 under no. 19.

[2] The frescoes are now in Musei Civici Treviso.

[3] Oertel 1940, p. 247, n. 41; Toesca 1951, p. 755, n. 281; Gibbs 1989, p. 300; Degenhart/Schmitt 2004, vol. III‑2, pp. 234-35.

[4] Albertina, inv. 19.

[5] Musée du Louvre, inv. RF 419.

[6] Frits Lugt Collection-Fondation Custodia, inv. 5716.

[7] Degenhart/Schmitt 1968, vol. I‑2, p. 641; Degenhart/Schmitt 2004, vol. III‑2, pp. 234-35.

[8] Chennevières 1880, p. 8; Zuliani in Treviso 1979, p. 108, n. 52; Gibbs 1989, p. 300; Birke/Kertész 1992, vol. 1, p. 12 under no. 19.

[9] Meder 1923, p. 294.

[10] Paris 1935, no. 502; Degenhart 1937, p. 294; Meder/Ames 1978, vol. 2, p. 10.

[11] Degenhart/Schmitt 2004, vol. III‑2, pp. 234-35.

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