Collecting And Connoisseurship
When conceived as preliminary studies, Italian drawings often did not survive after the related project was completed. Some, however, were passed to family members or students or acquired by collectors. One of the first such collectors was Giorgio Vasari, who considered his multivolume Libro dei Disegni (Book of Drawings)—featuring elaborately mounted works by artists ranging from Giotto to draftsmen of his time—to be an extension of his Vite (Lives of the Artists). Subsequent collectors, including Padre Sebastiano Resta, Jonathan Richardson Sr., and Pierre-Jean Mariette, built on Vasari’s example, adding their own marks to those made by the draftsmen whose work they acquired, employing handwritten inscriptions, custom-made mats, and personalized stamps. Stamps were also used by two Princetonians, former Museum director Frank Jewett Mather Jr. and Dan Fellows Platt, Class of 1895, whose gifts and bequests of Italian drawings, made in the 1930s and 1940s, form the foundation of the Museum’s collection.
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Study for a Decorative Wall Frieze with Female Supporting FiguresStudy for a Decorative Wall Frieze with Female Supporting Figures, ca. 1570–75
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Study for a Decorative Wall Frieze with TelamonsStudy for a Decorative Wall Frieze with Telamons, ca. 1570–75
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Young Man Grasping a ColumnYoung Man Grasping a Column, ca. 1575
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Medea Killing Her ChildrenMedea Killing Her Children, 1810–1815
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Nude Youth with GoatsNude Youth with Goats, ca. 1523–24
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Young Woman Carrying a VesselYoung Woman Carrying a Vessel, late 1530s
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Male Torso in Armor Seen from the Rear: Study for Soffit Decoration in San Giovanni EvangelistaMale Torso in Armor Seen from the Rear: Study for Soffit Decoration in San Giovanni Evangelista, ca. 1522–24
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Studies for figure of Victory; seated figure of Pallas AthenaStudies for figure of Victory; seated figure of Pallas Athena, ca. 1531–35
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Standing Saint Roch: Study for the Saint Gothard AltarpieceStanding Saint Roch: Study for the Saint Gothard Altarpiece, ca. 1525–26
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Study for the Last SupperStudy for the Last Supper, ca. 1603