The Drawings of Michelangelo and His Followers in the Ashmolean Museum

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

and Irregular Numbering inscriptions came onto the art
market in the eighteenth century. Two of these drawings,
both now in the Ashmolean, were owned by Sir Joshua
Reynolds (Cats. 20 , 26 ).
In the inventory of the Duke of Bracciano, it is also
noted that there were 282 drawings of the “Capella Ses-
tina del Vaticano fatti di Michelangelo,” but it is evident
that most, if not all, of these were copies – sixty-eight,
after engravings after figures from the Sistine ceiling –
remain together at Haarlem.^176 It is probable that the
album of autograph drawings by Michelangelo was that
made up by Sandrart, which had remained intact while
in Christina’s collection and which was only subsequently
dismembered. If so Sandrart would have owned one of
the largest – and best – collections ever formed of draw-
ings by Michelangelo. There is no evidence to suggest
when the remaining seventy-seven pages, probably con-
taining over one hundred sheets of drawings, were cut
from the album or where they went, but their number
may account for some of the other drawings that seem to
have become available in Rome in the late seventeenth
or early eighteenth century, such as the study forLibica,
now in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, which was
probably owned by Carlo Maratta.^177 That this sheet once
formed part of the Sandrart-Christina group is suggested
bytheBona Rotiinscription that it bears.
It seems that no further dispersals from this album
at least of Michelangelo drawings, were made between
whatever was presented to Crozat and its sale to the
trustees of the Teyler Museum in Haarlem in the 1790 s
byDon Livio’s descendants. Although it is debatable
whether the Teyler Museum contains thirty-two auto-
graph sheets, the number comes close to that, and it is
likely that the Christina-Odescalchi album contained pre-
dominantly genuine drawings.
Pierre Crozat, who, from 1714 onward, negotiated the
sale of the Duke of Bracciano’s paintings to the Duke
d’Orleans, received as his fee one hundred drawings from ́
the Odescalchi collection. According to Mariette, some
sixty of these were of real value, and they may have
included a few by Michelangelo. But given the quality
of the drawings acquired by the Teyler Museum only
seventy years later, it seems evident that Crozat was not
offered the top of the range. In any case, no drawing with
an identifiable Crozat provenance bears either theBona
Rotiinscription or an Irregular Numbering.
Crozat did, nevertheless, obtain at least one major
Michelangelo in Italy. It was probably in 1714 that he
acquired numerous sheets – including some by Raphael –
from the heirs of the Cardinal of Santi Quattro, who
had formed his collection in the first half of the sev-

enteenth century. Among these was a large drawing
byMichelangelo of Christ and the Samaritan Woman.
Recorded in Crozat’s posthumous sale of 1741 , traceable
in further sales until 1807 ,itwas then lost to sight until
1981 when it was rediscovered in the Bodmer Library in
Geneva; it was subsequently sold by Sotheby’s in New
York on 28 January 1998 , lot 102.^178 From the character-
istic inscription on its recto, it is certain that it had been
owned by the Cardinal.
Gori remarked that, apart from the Grand Ducal Col-
lections, there were other collections of drawings by
Michelangelo in Florence. Among these was that of
Filippo Cicciaporci, of which Bottari’s account has been
cited previously. Gori also refers to the collection of Sena-
tore Pandolfo Pandolfini, who had inherited the personal
collection formed by Filippo Baldinucci, comprising four
large volumes of drawings, arranged in historical order.
In his edition of Vasari, Bottari somewhat amplifies this
information:

Ifigli Pandolfini eredi del Senator Pandolfo Pandolfini uomo
dotto, e dilettante delle belle arti, e promotore degli artefici,
hanno molti disegni originali di Michelangelo, de’ quanti
alcuni sono in cornice col loro cristallo, e alcuni sono inser-
iti in 4 tomi di vari disegni, che si era formati per suo stu-
dio e diletto, il celebre Filippo Baldinucci, nel tempo che
egli ordino i13 0 grossi volumi di disegni della immortal
regia Casa de’ Medici, per ordine del cardinale Leopoldo
della stessa famiglia. E siccome questi distribuigli per ordine
cronologico del tempo in cui fiorivano quelli artefici, cosi
lui distribuili i detti quattro suoi tomi.^179

These volumes were acquired for the Louvre in 1806 ,
but they contained no drawings now accepted as origi-
nal studies by Michelangelo. There seems to be no fur-
ther information about the framed and glazed drawings,
among which could well have been some originals, and
it may be that these were disposed of separately. It was the
disruptions in Florence of the late eighteenth century –
beginning with the dis-establishment of many religious
orders – that released a flood of works of art onto the
market and accelerated the liquidation of the city’s artis-
tic capital. This, of course, was greatly increased by the
European wars of the 1790 s. And it was from this situ-
ation, to return to our starting-point, that Sir Thomas
Lawrence profited so comprehensively.18 0

notes

1. Woodburn,184 6. Although this catalogue was printed for
J. Fisher, it copies Woodburn,184 2, and is here classed under
Woodburn’s name.
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