A Newly Discovered Leonardo?
2009-04-27 14:04:05 未知
A curator believes that he has discovered a new work by Leonardo da Vinci hidden within a seven-part panel attributed to the Renaissance sculptor Andrea del Verrocchio, the New York Times reports.
Gary M. Radke, a professor at Syracuse University and curator of the exhibition “Leonardo da Vinci: Hand of the Genius,” which opens at Atlanta’s High Museum of Art in the fall, believes that Verrocchio had help from assistants when he made the panel “Beheading of the Baptist” (1480) for the silver altar in the Florence Baptistery. After studying the panel, Radke came to the conclusion that da Vinci, who is known to have assisted the older artist in the 1470s, created two of seven figures in the work.
Since the seven figures were each created individually and then inserted with pins into the final piece, Radke could examine them one by one. Two, he decided, stood out from the rest for their greater level of detail, which heightened the impression of three-dimensionality.
“Verrocchio had a talent for observing nature, and these observations were more generalized in his work,” Radke said. “Leonardo, however, wasn’t content until every bone and every vein is seen on every figure.”
The panel, which is now in the Cathedral Museum in Florence, will be included in the Atlanta show, with detailed photographs and illustrations arguing Radke’s case.
As to whether other scholars agree with his discovery, he said, “No one has disputed that these two figures are different. It’s really how to interpret them.”
Click to Browse the Chinese Version(责任编辑:李丹丹)
注:本站上发表的所有内容,均为原作者的观点,不代表雅昌艺术网的立场,也不代表雅昌艺术网的价值判断。
全部评论 (0)