拍品 17
  • 17

馬里奧托‧迪‧比亞喬‧迪‧賓多‧阿爾貝蒂尼

估價
200,000 - 300,000 GBP
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招標截止

描述

  • Mariotto di Biagio di Bindo Albertinelli
  • 《聖母訪親》
  • 款識:藝術家簽名並紀年MARIOTTI . FLORETINI (sic). OPVS . /.1508.(中下)
  • 油彩楊木畫板,畫板頂部被延長

來源

Bought by an ancestor of the present owner in 1825 at Wittmers in Cologne, with the assistance of the Prussian Regierungsrat Werner von Harthausen;
Thence by descent. 

Condition

The following condition report has been provided by Sarah Walden, an independent restorer who is not an employee of Sotheby's. Albertinelli Mariotti. The Visitation. Signed and dated at lower centre ‘Mariotti Fiorentini opus 1508’ This painting is on a classic Florentine poplar panel with three joints and two cross bars. The back has been primed at a later date and one of the bars fairly recently removed, but the panel seems to have remained generally fairly stable overall, with traces of the central joint just faintly visible at present. There is a certain amount of possibly fairly long established curves in the overall surface and some comparatively brief old cracks from the top and base. The succession of rectangular blocks added across the top and the equally rigid strip across the base plus a narrow added strip down the right edge, might well have put added strain on the original panel. These surrounding additions, presumably dating back to the early nineteenth century, appear to have been made for reasons of taste or framing but the original concept was evidently quite different to the earlier Visitation in the Uffizi. The present varnish and restoration also belongs to that period, perhaps with occasional additional dabs of retouching from time to time. There is one possible recent knock in the upper left background between the two figures, apparently recently overpainted. Older retouching can be seen in places under ultra violet light, for instance in superficial broad brushed strokes here and there in Elizabeth’s orange drapery, other apparently surface retouching can be seen on her hand laid on the Madonna’s arm, with other fairly rough surface touches over their clasped hands in the centre. Elisabeth’s veil seems to have had several scattered retouchings, with little touches probably in her face, and perhaps in parts of her deep madder under robe. The head of the Madonna is finely intact and seems to have remained completely pure and unworn. St Anne’s head on the left seems also to be in good, well preserved condition, as may also be the head of the right hand figure. A few incidental marks or losses can be seen with the naked eye, for instance in the lower centre of the orange drapery a small oval mark possibly from a knot in the wood, with an old swirl of partly retouched craquelure, also perhaps from a knot, nearby. Rather higher up in the Madonna’s blue robe a slim fairly old surface crack with loose flakes can also be found. Various darkened retouchings and old flakes are clearly evident along the base and the edges. Essentially however beneath the rather messy, unflattering surface confusion from the accreted varnishes etc. of almost two centuries, the painting seems to have survived in good underlying condition overall, without the wear so frequently the result of successive restorations. This is especially evident in the two central figures with their magnificent drapery, stemming directly from the same cartoon as the Visitation in the Uffizi. This report was not done under laboratory conditions.
"This lot is offered for sale subject to Sotheby's Conditions of Business, which are available on request and printed in Sotheby's sale catalogues. The independent reports contained in this document are provided for prospective bidders' information only and without warranty by Sotheby's or the Seller."

拍品資料及來源

Few works by Albertinelli, one of the greatest exponents of the Florentine High Renaissance, remain in private hands. This example, which has the unusual distinction of being both signed and dated, has remained in the same family collection since its acquisition in 1825.

This hitherto unpublished, signed and dated panel is a rare addition to the catalogue of Mariotto Albertinelli, one of the protagonists of the High Renaissance in Florence. The painting is an autograph variant of his most celebrated work, the Visitation in the Uffizi, Florence (see fig. 1), which is dated 1503 but is not signed.1 The Uffizi altarpiece was conceived with three predella panels showing different episodes from the life of the Virgin and was painted in 1503 for the Florentine church of Santa Elisabetta (formerly known as San Michele), deconsecrated in 1785. The subject depicts the event narrated in the Gospel of Luke in which Elizabeth, Mary's cousin and pregnant with John the Baptist, visits Mary, who is also with child. Since it is the scriptural episode in which Elizabeth features most prominently, it is appropriate that it should have been the subject chosen for a church dedicated to her.

Just five years after executing the Uffizi prototype, which shows the undeniable influence of Perugino in its use of soft higlights and its inclusion of a classical arcade, the artist returned to the subject using the same cartoon but introduced some fundamental differences to the design: the architectural niche and the landscape have been removed and two additional figures have been introduced. While the central figures may wear robes different in color and detail from the prototype, they are very much faithful to the original in their harmonious pyramidal design which balances both movement and stasis. Interestingly, the face of Elizabeth in the present work is no longer in shadow as it is in the Uffizi version.

After training with Cosimo Rosselli in the late 1480s, Albertinelli set up a workshop with Fra Bartolommeo, who had also trained under Cosimo. The close working relationship between the two meant that for many years some doubts remained over who had painted certain works. For example, the Kress tondo now in the Columbia Museum of Art in South Carolina was repeatedly given to Fra Bartolommeo but is now thought to be the work of Albertinelli using the former's cartoon.2 In the case of the present design it seems that Albertinelli again made use of his friend's ideas: though drawings of the Visitation by Albertinelli do exist, an album of works in the Louvre, which are unmistakably by Bartolommeo's hand, show that the present composition was first conceived by the friar.3 Moreover, the same album contains drawings by Fra Bartolommeo which provided the basis for Albertinelli's triptych from 1500 today in the Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan.4

After inspecting the panel in the original, Professor Andrea De Marchi has endorsed the attribution to Albertinelli and tentatively proposed that the lateral figures may be the work of Giuliano Bugiardini. According to Vasari, Albertinelli included a portrait of Bugiardini in the fresco of the Last Judgement in San Marco, which he took over from Fra Bartolommeo when the latter stopped painting for four years upon entering the Dominican Order. Bugiardini is known to have rented quarters next to Albertinelli in 1503 and began assisting him shortly thereafter.

 

1. Oil on panel, 232 by 146 cm., (inventory number 1587); see Gli Uffizi, Catalogo Generale, Florence 1979, p. 117, cat. no. P20, reproduced.
2. See A.R. Blumenthal (ed.), Cosimo Rosselli, Painter of the Sistine Chapel, exhibition catalogue, Winter Park, Florida 2001, pp. 194–97, cat. no. 25, reproduced in colour.
3. For a further discussion see C. Fischer, Fra Bartolommeo et son atelier, exhibition catalogue, Paris 1994, pp. 60–66.
4. See M. Natale, Museo Poldi Pezzoli, Dipinti, Milan 1982, pp. 158–59, cat. no. 199, reproduced.