MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)
MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)
MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)
2 更多
MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)
5 更多
MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)

An Allegory of Fortitude

细节
MICHELE TOSINI, CALLED MICHELE DI RIDOLFO DEL GHIRLANDAIO (BADIA DI PASSIGNANO 1503-1577 FLORENCE)
An Allegory of Fortitude
oil on panel
28 5⁄8 x 21 5⁄8 in. (72.7 x 55 cm.)
来源
John Giles, Albion Street, London; his sale, Christie's, London, 2 February 1881, lot 635, as 'A. del Sarto' (33 gns.).
Mr Merbury, and by descent in the family to the following,
Anonymous sale [Property of a Gentleman]; Sotheby's, London, 11 December 1996, lot 34.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, New York, 22 January 2004, lot 15.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, New York, 25 January 2007, lot 31.
with Sphinx Fine Art, London, where acquired by the present owner.

荣誉呈献

Clementine Sinclair
Clementine Sinclair Senior Director, Head of Department

拍品专文

Michele Tosini began his training in the workshop of Lorenzo di Credi, and in 1525 moved to the workshop of Ridolfo Ghirlandaio, with whom he frequently collaborated. He took on a significant role in the workshop from the 1540s, eventually taking it over entirely and adopting Ridolfo’s name as his own. His more mature works, such as the panel under discussion here, show a keen Mannerist influence that draws on his Florentine contemporaries, including Bronzino, Salviati and, later, Vasari, with whom Tosini also collaborated on the decorative scheme in the Salone dei Cinquecento in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence.
This fine panel can be placed with a group of pictures that show female figures, in half- or bust-length, crisply executed and featuring common motifs. This group includes Lucretia and Leda (both Rome, Galleria Borghese); a Saint Mary Magdalen (sold Sotheby’s, New York, 28 January 2010, lot 196); a Judith (sold in these Rooms, 27 April 1928, lot 41); and the Head of a Woman, sold in these Rooms, 7 December 2018, lot 171 (£118,750; fig. 1), which featured a similar lion motif on the headdress. Indeed, the jewelled pendant hanging from the lion’s jaw reappears in a number of these panels, suggesting that it was may have been a prop in the artist’s studio.

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