Italian Master Drawings from the Morgan
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The Morgan Library & Museum's collection of Italian old master drawings is one of the most significant in this country and functions as a cornerstone of the institution's holdings in graphic art. The nucleus of the Morgan's Italian drawings—presently numbering at nearly three thousand sheets including sketchbook and album pages—originated in Pierpont Morgan's 1909 purchase of fifteen hundred drawings from the Fairfax Murray collection, which contained exceptional examples of sixteenth- and eighteenth-century Italian draftsmanship. Since then the Morgan has acquired, through both purchases and gifts, remarkable Italian drawings and continues to grow.
The Morgan houses drawings by Italy's most prominent Renaissance artists. Florence—arguably the center of draftsmanship in Renaissance Italy—yielded a plethora of master draftsmen, such as Sandro Botticelli, Filippo Lippi, and Fra Bartolommeo, whose works reveal the central role of drawing in the artistic process. This practice is brought to a remarkable level of perfection in drawings by the canonical triumvirate of Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael. The succeeding generation of artists, such as Andrea del Sarto, Jacopo Pontormo, and Luca Signorelli, as well as major north Italian masters of the Renaissance, such as Correggio, Parmigianino, and Andrea Mantegna, are also well-represented in the collection.
From artists who worked for papal Rome during the seventeenth century, the Morgan owns significant works by Annibale Carracci, Gianlorenzo Bernini, and Pietro da Cortona. The breadth of the Morgan's collection of Italian Baroque drawings is due in large part to the incorporation during the second half of the twentieth century of the Janos Scholz collection, which introduced a large number of accomplished drawings by artists working in various artistic centers, such as Bologna, Naples, Genoa, and Milan.
Venetian drawings are a particularly rich component of the Morgan's Italian drawings collection. In addition to drawings by Renaissance masters such as Vittore Carpaccio, Titian, Jacopo Tintoretto, and Paolo Veronese, the Morgan's holdings comprise the best collection of Venetian eighteenth-century drawings in the United States. Sheets with elegant views of Venice by Canaletto and Giambattista Tiepolo's exquisite decorative designs are numerous and of the highest quality.
Lombard school
Model Book, 1360–80
Pen and brown ink, with brown wash and some watercolor, on parchment
Gift of J. P. Morgan, Jr., 1924; II, 2–25 (folio 12)
The Morgan model book, often referred to as a sketchbook, comprises delicately rendered drawings mostly in pen and brown ink, some with added wash (in green, violet, or red), on fourteen goatskin leaves.
One such example is the hunt scene (folio 12. repr.), which in its composite nature resembles two of the illustrations in Tacuina manuscripts in Vienna and Rome as well as another in Liège with similar animal motifs. Set in a craggy landscape punctuated by three solitary trees, a young hunter, sporting a spear and blowing a horn, hides behind a hill as his hound successfully captures a hare by the hind leg; an owl stands by expectantly below to the right. Another scene of pursuit appears in the lower register, where a dog chases a bear while a cunning fox remains undiscovered, comfortably curled up beneath a tree.