Not on display

Head studies

Baccio (Bartolomeo, Brandini) Bandinelli (1488 - 1560)

Artist/Maker

Material / Technique

Pen and brown ink (iron gall ink) on brown beige paper. Laid down.

Dimensionsh x w: Mått 35 x 27,7 cm h x w: Passepartout 55 x 42 cm h x w x d: Ram 60 x 47 x 3,5 cm

Inventory numberNMH 128/1863

AcqusitionTransferred 1866 from Kongl. Museum

Other titlesTitle (sv): Huvudstudier Title (en): Head studies Inventory title (sv): Etude. Nio diverse manshufvuden de flesta med skägg Title (fr): Étude de neuf têtes d'hommes

DescriptionDescription: Numbered in pen and brown ink at lower right: 88. (Sparre). Inscribed in pen and brown ink at lower right: Baccio Bandinelli Bandinelli and his followers frequently drew suggestive groupings of heads such as that in the present study. Sometimes they are interpreted as illustrations of the three ages of Man, or as portraits of Bandinelli himself. This one is, as Roger Ward observed, without question by the hand of the master. The two larger heads in the top row bear a similarity to Bandinelli's main patron, Duke Cosimo I de' Medici. They are also close to the features of Hercules in Bandinelli's statue of "Hercules and Cacus" that Cosimo commissioned as a pendent to Michelangelo's David. Begun in 1525, the statue was erected outside the entrance to the Palazzo Vecchio only in 1534. The Hercules, which does bear a strong resemblance to Cosimo I, certainly was intended to carry allusions to Cosimo's political power. The profile head in the lower left of the sheet may be a portrait of Bandinelli himself as it corresponds to profile labeled as such in the Duke of Devonshire collection (inv. 23). A similar sheet of the heads of four men was sold Christie's (London, 1 july 1986, lot 41) [Bjurström, It. Drawings, cat. no. 1104]

Collection

Geographical origin

Geographical origin: Italy

MaterialPaper, Ink

TechniqueDrawing

Object category