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Study of a Male Nude, after Michelangelo

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Specifications

Title Study of a Male Nude, after Michelangelo
Material and technique Black chalk, heightened with white, on blue paper
Object type
Drawing > Two-dimensional object > Art object
Location This object is in storage
Dimensions Height 269 mm
Width 412 mm
Artists Workshop of: Jacopo Tintoretto (Jacopo Comin, Jacopo Robusti)
Accession number I 85 recto (PK)
Credits Loan Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (former Koenigs collection), 1940
Department Drawings & Prints
Acquisition date 1940
Creation date in circa 1570-1580
Watermark none (vV, 9P)
Inscriptions 'G. Tintoretto' (recto+verso, below left, pen and brown ink)
Collector Collector / Franz Koenigs
Mark J. Reynolds (L.2364), F.W. Koenigs (L.1023a on the removed mount)
Provenance From the workshop stock of the artist (died 1594); his son Domenico Tintoretto (died 1635); his brother-in-law and workshop assistant Sebastiano Casser (died 1679); - ; Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723-1792, L.2364)*, London; - ; Franz W. Koenigs (1881-1941, L.1023a), Haarlem, acquired in 1924 (Jacopo Tintoretto); D.G. van Beuningen (1877-1955), Rotterdam, acquired with the Koenigs Collection in 1940 and donated to Stichting Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
Exhibitions none
Research Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
Literature Tietze/Tietze-Conrat 1944, no. 1824 (Tintoretto workshop); Seilern 1957/59, under no. II-48; Byam Shaw 1976, p. 205, under no. 762
Material
Object
Technique
Highlight > Painting technique > Technique > Material and technique
Geographical origin Italy > Southern Europe > Europe
Place of manufacture Venice > Veneto region > Italy > Southern Europe > Europe

Entry catalogue Italian Drawings 1400-1600

Author: Albert Elen

The recto and the verso drawings on this study sheet are both related to the life-size marble sculpture Il Crepuscolo (Twilight or Dusk) by Michelangelo (1475-1564), which is part of the sculptural group of the marble funerary monument of Lorenzo II de’ Medici (1492-1519), duke of Urbino, in the Sacrestia Nuova (1520-34) of the church of San Lorenzo in Florence. It is one of two large marble sculptures of nude allegorical figures reclining on two volutes on either side of the sarcophagus’s lid, one male, the other female, embodying twilight and dawn (L’Aurora). They are part of a larger scheme, The Times of Day, which also includes the similar personifications of night (La Notte) and day (Il Giorno) on the funerary monument of Giuliano II de’ Medici (1479-1517), duke of Nemours, on the opposite wall of the sacristy.

Michelangelo’s two funerary monuments became famous almost as soon as they were installed, drawing a lot of attention and admiration. Artists eagerly made copies after them in different media, in order to study Michelangelo’s virtuosity. Tintoretto’s biographer, Carlo Ridolfi, elaborating in 1584 on an earlier account by the artist’s contemporary Raffaello Borghini (1537-1588)[1], recounts how Tintoretto, who never travelled outside the Veneto, obtained from Florence some ‘piccolo modelli’ (small-scale models) of the four allegorical sculptures of this monument made by Daniele da Volterra (c.1509-1566), which he studied by candlelight, making numerous drawings from different angles.[2] These models were created in 1557 but, as Marciari (2018) has pointed out, Tintoretto must have had a replica of Michelangelo’s Twilight at his disposal at least a decade earlier because a quotation of the reclining figure can be discerned in a detail at lower right in his first great masterpiece, The Miracle of the Slave in Venice, which is dated 1548.[3]

From around 1560, Tintoretto also involved his pupils, foremost among them three of his own young children, in his drawing classes, training their skills in draughtsmanship and demonstrating how to study the muscular bodies and dynamic postures of the sculptural models by changing the viewpoint and the position of the light source, thus creating strong contrasts of light and dark. The pupils tried their best to emulate their master’s example, absorbing his skills and using the same stock of paper and chalks, and their drawings are generally close to Tintoretto’s own, but often lacked the virtuosity of his handling of the medium. Because these drawings are mere working material they were not signed, and for lack of secure drawings by individual members of the workshop, apart from the most talented child, Domenico (1560-1635), it is practically impossible to distinguish between various hands. Most of the drawings not accepted as autograph works by the master or his son therefore remain anonymous and are classified as ‘workshop’. To judge from the hesitant and sketchy execution and overemphasized shadows, this drawing belongs to that category.[4] The recto drawing is repeated on the reverse, or vice versa, but upside down, probably executed by the same hand. It is noteworthy that the drawn figure is lying almost horizontal, while the sculpture is at a somewhat oblique angle to the volute, which may be due to cropping of the sheet by a later owner who did not have the model in mind. A stronger study after this model of Twilight, also frontal and repeated on the reverse, but from a slightly higher viewpoint, is now in London.[5] There is another, but more audacious study of the model, seen from above, by Tintoretto himself, now in Florence.[6] In all, some forty studies by Jacopo Tintoretto (and his workshop) exist after sculptural models of Michelangelo’s Medici tomb sculptures in Florence.[7]

Footnotes

[1] Borghini 1584, p. 511 (edition Milan 1807, vol. 3, p. 118).

[2] Ridolfi 1642, pp. 6-7. Six years before his famous Le meraviglie dell’arte […], printed in two volumes in 1648, Ridolfi published a biography exclusively of Jacopo Tintoretto and his children Marco and Marietta. This is the primary source on the artist’s life and works.

[3] Gallerie dell’Accademia, inv. 42; since 1816, until 1797 in the Scuola Grande di San Marco. The figure wearing a pink turban in the lower right corner of the painting; Marciari 2018, p. 91 (the painting: pp. 52-53, fig. 25).

[4] We are grateful to John Marciari for his expert opinion, given during his visit in September 2017.

[5] Courtauld Gallery, inv. D.1978.PG.100; Venice/Washington 2018, pp. 7-8, 264, fig. 5. Another version of this drawing is in an unknown location.

[6] Gallerie degli Uffizi, inv. 13048 F; Venice/Washington 2018, pp. 172-73, 264, fig. 149.

[7] The Koenigs Collection has one more drawing after the Medici sculptures: inv. I 79, a study after a replica of Giuliano II de’ Medici.

Show research Italian Drawings 1400-1600
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Jacopo Tintoretto (Jacopo Comin, Jacopo Robusti)

Venetië 1518/1519 - Venetië 1594

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