The Drawings of Michelangelo and His Followers in the Ashmolean Museum

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

18 0. Nothing seems to be known about Jeremiah Harman’s
“Michelangelo” drawings, which Woodburn added to those from
Lawrence. Harman was active as a collector of paintings, and these
drawings, none of which has a traceable provenance prior to his
ownership, were probably a secondary interest. None of those
that came to Oxford (Cats. 60 , 89 , 98 , 99 )isofhigh quality,
although none is without interest. A fifth drawing, then thought to
be by Michelangelo (184 6– 21 )was subsequently given to Baccio
Bundimelli (P. II 77 ).
Attention may be drawn here to the very different interpretation
of much of the evidence treated in this chapter and in the appen-
dices, which was provided by Perrig, 1999 , who proposes that the
majority of drawings generally believed to come from Casa Buonar-
roti are in fact minor drawings, mostly by Giulio Clovio, from the
collection of the King of Naples (the former Farnese Collection),
which Wicar would have obtained in the 1790 s, and to which he
and Woodburn attached false provenances. Perrig further suggests
that other worthless Farnese drawings were dispersed c. 1600 , and

that some of these then entered Casa Buonarroti, to be themselves
dispersed c. 1800 ,falsely as Michelangelos. This reconstruction of
events – perverse to the highest degree – is based only on negatives,
is unsupported by any positive evidence, assumes every mistaken
provenance supplied by Woodburn to reveal conspiracy, and, finally,
is prompted by, and rests on acceptance of, Perrig’s connoisseur-
ship, expressed in his demotion of most Michelangelo drawings to
the status of copies or imitations, or in his allocation of them to
other draughtsmen, reattributions nowhere supported by sustained
comparison with drawings genuinely by those other draughtsmen.
Perrig’s views remain isolated and are accepted by no serious stu-
dent of Michelangelo’s draughtsmanship. This is not the place for
an extended discussion of the article of 1999 , nor would it be
worthwhile, but it might be useful to signal some of its more fun-
damental omissions: silence about the copies by Andrea Commodi
and Francesco Buonarroti, about the Cicciaporci Collection, and
about the sales by Ottley and the testimony provided in his sale
catalogues.
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