The Drawings of Michelangelo and His Followers in the Ashmolean Museum

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30 THE DRAWINGS OF MICHELANGELO AND HIS FOLLOWERS IN THE ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM

of his edition of Vasari, published in 1760 ,provides some
information:
Il Signor Filippo Cicciaporci, gentiluomo Fiorentino, ha una
copiossisima e singolar raccolta di disegni di vari, e tutti
d’insegni professori tanto antichi che moderni. Ella in gran
parte proviene da una collezione, che aveva fatta giailcav-`
alier Giuseppe Cesari d’Arpino, che egli poie andato sem-`
pre aumentando. Tra essi ve ne sono circa 80 attribuiti a
Michelangelo, e molti professori, che gli hanno veduti, gli
credono originali terminati parte di lapis rosso o nero e parti
in penna, fatti con quella intelligenza, e bravura, ch’era pro-
prio di questo divino artefice, sua insieme finiti con molto
diligenza. Il detto gentiluomo di presente abita in Roma.
It is particularly significant that this cache also included a
number of drawings by Daniele da Volterra.^165
Filippo Cicciaporci’s collection seems to have been
dispersed – probably in Rome rather than Florence –
around 1765 , shortly after Bottari published his edition of
Vasari. The main immediate beneficiary was no doubt the
Rome-based sculptor, restorer, and art-dealer, Bartolom-
meo Cavaceppi – listed by Ottley as the intermediate
owner of all the drawings said to come from Cicciaporci –
and a number of drawings with this provenance were
eventually acquired by William Young Ottley. Among
them were certainly some genuine drawings by Michelan-
gelo, including one in the British Museum (W 29 /Corpus
97 ), which is similar in pen style and approach to Cat. 22.
Cat. 22 itself was never owned by Ottley but was acquired
byWoodburn from Baron Dominique-Vivant Denon,
who may have been another beneficiary, via Cavaceppi,
from the dispersal of the Cicciaporci Collection when he
wasinItaly in the 1780 s and 1790 s. Vivant Denon owned
the famousDragon, Cat. 28 , which is similar in style
to theSybiland may also have been acquired in Italy –
although in this instance a strong argument can be made
for a French provenance.^166
Much less is known about Daniele’s other major pupil,
Michele degli Alberti, who also presumably acquired a
portion of the drawings left by his master. But it would
be tempting to identify him – or the still more shadowy
Feliciano di San Vito – as the owner of a group of
Michelangelo drawings, including a few copies by close
followers, that has recently been partly reconstituted.^167
These drawings can be identified by distinctive inscrip-
tions or by distinctive numberings or both. The inscrip-
tion usually readsdi Michel Angelo Bona Rotior some close
variant and is often accompanied by a number, written
byadifferent hand. Both inscription and number seem
to be of the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century.
It is likely that theBona Rotiinscriptions precede the

numbers.^168 The numbers rise as high as 96 , and this
series probably ran to around 100 sheets; at least seven are
in the Ashmolean.^169 However, because not all the draw-
ings carry both inscriptions and numbers, it is impossi-
bletosaywhether those sheets that carry one and not
the other were separated before those that carry both, or
whether they are simply sheets that were later trimmed or
subdivided. It is also a matter for conjecture whether the
drawings that bear both inscriptions and numbers passed
through two collections successively or remained in a sin-
gle collection but were marked at different moments by
different hands. The compiler is inclined to favour the
latter explanation, but it is safer to treat them as though
they were owned by two collectors, to be dubbed, respec-
tively, theBona RotiCollector and the Irregular Number-
ing Collector.
The largest group of such sheets is now in the Teyler
Museum in Haarlem. The Teyler’s holding of Michelan-
gelo drawings is the remains of a collection formed pri-
marily in Italy, between 1629 and 1637 ,probably from a
combination of single and group purchases, by the artist
and writer Joachim von Sandrart. Sandrart must have been
in touch with the owners of caches of Michelangelo draw-
ings, and virtually all those that are known today with a
secure provenance from his collection are of high quality.
In particular might be mentioned a group of extraordi-
narily beautiful drawings made for the Sistine ceiling. It
is in principle possible that Sandrart acquired some of
his drawings from the Cavaliere d’Arpino, but his sin-
gle most significant source of Michelangelo drawings was
probably the owner of theBona Roti/Irregular Number-
ing group. It is certain that the inscriptions and num-
berings were applied to these drawings before Sandrart
acquired them, and not after. One obvious reason for say-
ing this is that Sandrart possessed a number of drawings
byRaphael and his studio that are also now at Haar-
lem, and whose later provenance is identical with that
of the Michelangelos, and none of these drawings bears
comparable inscriptions or numbers.^170 It is notable that
the Michelangelo drawings in the Teyler Museum include
both of the figure-studies forCascina, which were known
in Rome in the155 0s and15 6 0, plus another sheet of
which both sides contain drawings executed by Michelan-
gelo specifically for Daniele, one made in preparation for
the statue of SaintPaulcommissioned from Daniele for
the Ricci chapel in San Pietro in Montorio, for which he
ordered marble in155 6,and the other side for Daniele’s
Aeneas Commanded by Mercury to Relinquish Dido,apaint-
ing being prepared by Daniele for Giovanni della Casa
in 1555 – 6.^171 It is tempting to conclude that the inscrip-
tions and the numbers are related to the group of sheets
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