The Drawings of Michelangelo and His Followers in the Ashmolean Museum

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0521551331 c 01 CUNY 160 /Joannides 052155 133 1 January 10 , 2007 22 : 22


78 WHOLLY OR PARTIALLY AUTOGRAPH SHEETS CATALOGUE 5

Condition
The sheet is drummed by the four edges to the backboard
of the mount, and the verso is not visible. There are sev-
eral areas of loss with historic toned infills, and repairs
are visible, together with severe pressed-out creases.
There is uneven discolouration, local media staining,
and ingrained dirt. The medium is abraded, worn, and
faded.

Inscriptions
Lower centre, in pen and ink:Micchel Angelo Buonarota,
perhaps recording a previous inscription. The hand
responsible is identified by Parker as that of Michelan-
gelo’s great-nephew, Michelangelo the Younger, and this
is accepted by Barocchi, 1964 c,but the handwriting does
not seem to the compiler close to that of the restoration of
the poems 3 and 4 on Cat. 4 verso, and it is hard to believe
that the Younger Michelangelo would have produced so
eccentric a spelling of his great uncle’s Christian name.
Indeed, the compiler is minded to reject this identifica-
tion. If, however, it could be shown to be correct, and if
the inscription replaces an earlier one by theBuona Rota
Collector, as the truncated number of the Irregular Num-

bering Collector at the lower right edge would suggest,
then it would imply that this or these collection(s) was or
were dispersed as a whole or in part within the lifetime of
Michelangelo the Younger (15 6 8– 1647 ), giving him the
opportunity to acquire it.
Lower right edge, the irregular numbering:no.(cutby
the edge of the sheet).

Description
Acavalryman charging forward in pursuit of a fleeing
man, with two others falling below the hoofs of his horse,
is assailed by pikemen at left and right.

Discussion
This drawing was clearly developed from the sketch on
Cat. 4 , which, in turn, was developed from the right side
of the compositional drawing on W 3 /Corpus 36 (pen
and ink, 186 × 183 mm), in which the central element
is a collision of lance-bearing cavalrymen. A series of
drawings indicates that Michelangelo was planning a
battle between cavalrymen and between cavalrymen and
infantry at this time. It is probable that this was to be a sub-
sidiary part of theBattle of Cascina, although not all critics
have accepted this hypothesis, and it cannot positively be
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