The Drawings of Michelangelo and His Followers in the Ashmolean Museum

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THE DISPERSAL AND FORMATION OF SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE’S COLLECTION OF DRAWINGS 15

name had already been given in 1836 ,no. 80 ; the other
was184 2- 72 (“Three small studies on one mount”), not
shown in 1836. TheDream of Human Life, 1836 - 77 , had
been sold on to the King of Holland in the interim and
so did not appear in the184 2prospectus. The implica-
tion would seem to be, once again, that the remainder
had been acquired by Woodburn directly from Wicar.
When the works given a Buonarroti-Wicar provenance
in 1836 and184 2that are common to both catalogues
are added to those that appear only in one or the other,
it would seem that Woodburn possessed a total of fifty-
four mountings with a Buonarroti-Wicar provenance, of
which three (combining the information provided in the
1836 and184 2catalogues) were acknowledged also to have
been owned by Ottley.
In addition, Woodburn in184 2listed a further nine
mountings with Wicar as sole owner, presumably imply-
ing that they did not come from Casa Buonarroti.^96
Thus, combining the figures of 1836 and184 2,atotal
of sixty-three mountings would have come from Wicar.
Woodburn also listed fourteen mountings with Ott-
ley as sole owner.^97 A further mounting was given the
unique (and probably erroneous) provenance Buonarroti-
Ottley.^98 Finally the drawing on panel, Cat. 21 ,isstated
to have passed to Ottley from the King of Naples, and
two other drawings are said to have come to Ottley from
English collections.^99 If these references are taken at face
value, it would imply that fifty-five of the mountings
offered by Woodburn had come from Casa Buonarroti,
fifty-four via Wicar, and one via Ottley. Which ones and
how many of the group of nine mountings of which
Wicar is listed as sole source, or the group of fourteen
of which Ottley is listed as sole source, might also have
come from Casa Buonarroti is a question that can be
answered in part. Of the nine “Wicar alone” drawings,
five are not by Michelangelo, and it is unlikely that any of
them came from Casa Buonarroti.^100 It is probable that
all four of the autograph sheets came from Casa Buonar-
roti, but only one can be proved to have done so.^101 Of
the fifteen “Ottley alone” mountings, seven-and-a-half
are neither by Michelangelo nor from his studio, and it is
unlikely that any of them came from Casa Buonarroti.^102
Of the remaining seven-and-a-half, it seems probable that
one (184 2- 32 /Cat. 24 ), although autograph, had a non-
Buonarroti provenance (Cicciaporci is most likely), but
that the remainder, including one drawing by Antonio
Mini (184 2- 60 /Cat. 74 ) and another given here to Pietro
d’Argenta (184 2- 63 /Cat. 58 ), did indeed come from Casa
Buonarroti.^103 If the four Wicar mountings and the seven-
and-a-half Ottley mountings are added to the fifty-five,
we reach a total of sixty-six-and-a-half mountings by

Michelangelo and his immediate followers with a direct
provenance from Casa Buonarroti.
One example of which the provenance in184 2is given
solely as Ottley is particularly instructive: This is184 2- 47 ,
one of the two mountings of four sheets from Michelan-
gelo’s Sistine sketchbook (Cats. 9 – 16 ). Its pair, the other
gathering of four sheets,184 2- 66 ,isspecifically given
the provenance Casa Buonarroti and Wicar. However,
six years previously, in 1836 ,both mountings ( 1836 - 2 and
1836 - 50 ) had been listed as coming solely from Ottley’s
collection. Thus, the provenance of one had been revised
in the interim – the single change of provenance infor-
mation given for the same drawings between 1836 and
184 2. One of these two mountings of four leaves each
can be traced further back: It had previously appeared
in Ottley’s 1814 sale, and then it was divided into two
mountings of two sheets apiece ( 1814 - 264 and 1814 - 265 ),
both described as coming from the Buonarroti Collec-
tion. One of these two mountings must have included
Cat. 11 ,ofwhich Ottley had reproduced the recto in
hisItalian School of Design. The other four sketchbook
sheets, however, cannot be found in the 1814 sale. How is
this to be interpreted? Did Ottley own the second group
of four or did he not? In hisItalian School of Design,he
mentions possessing only four sheets, and there would
have been no good reason to conceal it had he owned
eight. It is probable, therefore, that Ottley did not possess
the second group. If so, and if the second group of four
really was acquired by Woodburn directly from Wicar,
it would imply that the provenance of both groups from
Ottley given by Woodburn in the 1836 catalogue was no
more than a typographical error, and that in184 2Wo o d -
burncorrected this for the group that Ottley had not
owned. What possible reason could Woodburn have had
for ignoring the Casa Buonarroti provenance for at least
one of the groups in 1836 while in184 2retaining the
provenance of one as Ottley, and giving the provenance
of the second as Buonarroti and Wicar, and excluding
Ottley? It is not as if in 1836 Woodburn was trying to
concealanytransfer Buonarroti-Wicar-Ottley, since he
had acknowledged this for two other drawings ( 1836 - 77
and 1836 - 80 ). And since a Buonarroti provenance had
been published for at least one of the two groups in
Ottley’s 1814 sale, what profit was there in attempting
to hide it in 1836 and184 2?Itisdifficult to elucidate any
consistent pattern in this, whether of openness or con-
cealment, and it is probably more reasonable – as well as
more charitable – to conclude that the discrepancies are
the result of confusion rather than conspiracy. Confusion
would also explain why the Cicciaporci-Cavaceppi prove-
nance given for two drawings in 1836 – nos. 63 and 84 ,
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