SANDRO BOTTICELLI (original name Alessandro di Mariano
Transcription
SANDRO BOTTICELLI (original name Alessandro di Mariano
SANDRO BOTTICELLI (original name Alessandro di Mariano Filipepi), Workshop of (Florence, 1 March 1445–17 May 1510, Florence) Madonna with Child Surrounded by an Angel and St. John the Baptist Tempera/oil on poplar wood (height of tondo 86.7 cm max., width 87.6 cm max.) in a modern 19th-century frame. Florence, approx. 1483–85 1 PROVENANCE: - Sold at auction as a Botticelli on 2 May 1826, probably in Paris (Vivant Denon, Dominique Vivant Denon, “Description des objets d’arts qui composent le cabinet de feu M. le Baron V”). - Prior to 1925 in the Arnold van Buuren/Nardus collection as a Botticelli, ascribed. - In 1925, Mak van Waay auction, Amsterdam, Vente Publique les 26-27 Mai 1925, lot 9 as a Botticelli – no bid accepted. - In 1940, referenced in the list of paintings of the van Buuren/Nardus collection as “enemy property,” Deutsche Revisions- und Treuhand- Aktiengesellschaft (German Revision and Trustee Stock Company), The Hague office, as of 10 September 1940, as a Botticelli. - In 1943, auction in Cologne, Lempertz on 2 June 1943, lot 7, as Sandro Botticelli school, sold for 19,000 reichsmarks. - Since then privately owned in the Rhineland region. LITERATURE: - Mak van Waay auction catalog, Amsterdam, 1925. Tableaux anciens Antiquités-Collections Arnold van Buuren "T Loover", Naarden, Vente Publique les 26–27 Mai 1925, lot 9. Lempertz auction catalog, Cologne, 1943. “Math. Lempertz’sche Kunstversteigerung” 420, 2-3 June 1943, lot 7. Gabriele Mandel, in Carlo Bo, L’Opera completa del Botticell, Milan 1967, p. 99 in cat. 93. The rediscovery of this Renaissance tondo of the Virgin Mary, from a private collection in the Rhineland region, provides fascinating insight into the busy activities of one of the most successful painting workshops during the Florentine Renaissance, that of Sandro Botticelli. The Virgin Mary is sitting on a balustrade in a simple, closed room offering no 2 view outside; she snuggles her lovely face gently against the cheeks of the divine child whom she caresses very tenderly and hugs tight. To mark their divine quality, the two are shown underneath a green canopy with pearl garland and red throne cloth. This divine familiarity is witnessed, on the left, by an angel dressed in yellow, holding an open book and pointing at the text of the neatly written Magnificat, while on the right the youthful Baptist has entered the frame who, inspired with prophetic power, directs his eyes upward. Even back when it made its first appearance on the art market – probably as early as 2 May 1826 on the occasion of an auction (if the painting listed there is indeed identical with this painting) – the lovely tondo was justifiably associated with Botticelli’s name. This theory has little to object to even today, nearly two centuries later, although the notion that Botticelli painted the picture with his own hand must be rejected. This opens a fascinating new chapter on the issue of how Botticelli’s workshop operated and on his commercial skills. After his training with Fra Filippo Lippi and likely brief visits to Verrocchio’s workshop, where he must have crossed paths with Leonardo da Vinci, who was training there, Botticelli founded his own artists’ workshop in 1470. The beginnings of his career as an independent artist cannot have been easy considering the tough competition by Florence’s leading companies of the brothers Pietro and Agnolo Pollaiuolo on the one hand and Verrocchio’s on the other. Artistically, his first works still very much follow the style of these painters, with Verrocchio’s influence clearly being the most dominant next to his unmistakable roots in Lippo Lippi’s workshop. Toward 1480 Sandro Botticelli must have become firmly established in the art scene of Florence, not least thanks to his privileged relations with the Medici clan. This is the only way we can explain why he, along with the artistic elite of Florence and Umbria, was called upon to help paint the sequence of frescoes about the Old and New Testaments in the Sistine Chapel, and in a central position at that. Today his paintings are regarded among the most successful frescoes in this sequence of works. After his return to Florence in 1483, Botticelli’s workshop was one of those most in demand in his hometown, so the master must have hired a large staff. In addition to his most ingenious creations, his representations of ancient myths as they were perceived by Florence’s humanist-poets and put into new words – in particular Primavera and The 3 Birth of Venus at the Uffizi – Botticelli produced numerous portraits for Florence’s rich merchant elite and a sheer endless series of pictures of the Madonna for private prayers which adorned the palazzi of Florence’s oligarchy. His output took on the character of an almost industrial production, as it were, with an intensity that was comparable to that of Sano di Pietro’s workshop in neighboring Siena, which is why specifically the category of Madonna paintings was produced in series. Botticelli’s great, masterly drafts were serially perpetuated at will in many different varieties and all kinds of figural combinations by his assistants. As a result, in addition to works that were undoubtedly created by Botticelli himself, an endless number of paintings have been handed down to us that were either created in his workshop under and his supervision, where he personally contributed here and there, or that were entirely painted by assistants based on the master’s drafts. A third group of Botticellian works, however, are those usually more modest paintings by typically less gifted painters outside of the workshop who simply picked up the master’s ideas for pictures and mechanically emulated them. Today it is up to experts to make heads or tails out of this archipelago of Botticellian Madonna pictures and separating the wheat from the chaff. When analyzing the paintings, the focus must be directed on strictly technical aspects as well as those of artistic quality. This strategy also forms the core of the art historical assessment of the tondo in question here. In addition to art historical criteria – especially an appraisal of the artistic quality – our analysis will also include aspects of painting technique as brought to light by Rüdiger Beck’s prudent technological examination. 4 1 If we now compare our tondo to Botticelli’s famous tondo of the Virgin Mary, which he probably painted himself after completing the frescoes in the Sistine Chapel, the Madonna del Magnificat in den Uffizi (1), we can clearly make out shortcomings in our painting in terms of artistic quality. The comparison quickly establishes that we are dealing with an – albeit magnificent – product of his workshop, even though it still remains to be decided if the master’s hand was involved in its production or if he left it entirely up to his workshop. The Florentine painting appears to be a harmonious picture concept whose elegant actors show great emotional intensity, whether in terms of their psychological expressiveness or in their gestures, which intermingle and interact sensitively with one 5 another. By contrast, in our painting the actors, some of whom are outstandingly well executed – the elegantly clothed, elegant angel deserves special mention – are strung together one after the other, almost cliché-like even. Clearly, this is a case of serial painting; the artist himself did not think up a new concept but ordered his workshop to produce a painting of the Madonna based on his stock of ideas, combining in the best way possible individual elements from his most successful works. Therefore it is hardly surprising that Rüdiger Beck’s technological results concerning our painting have clearly revealed that the central area with Madonna and her child was painted first and the two supporting actors, the angel and John the Baptist, were done in subsequent steps in relation to the central figures. No doubt the workshop assistant handling the central group of figures of Madonna and her child was able to resort to an existing cartoon by the master which, as a series of related paintings of Madonna in Sao Paolo (2) and Indianapolis (3) suggest, must have enjoyed a certain popularity. 6 2 3 This type of Madonna painting, which depicts the mother and her child cheek to cheek in tender devotion to one another, was subsequently varied in different ways in Botticelli’s workshop. The second type, as embodied in a workshop painting in Tel Aviv (4) and others (5, 6), is distinguished from our work only by the different – vertically aligned – posture of the child. 4, 5, 6 The latter concept – which was probably taken from Donatello’s oeuvre (7) – was already prefigured in the work of his teacher Fra Filippo Lippi and was picked up by Botticelli himself back during his earliest creative period (Virgin and Child Supported by an Angel in a Garland, Ajaccio, Musée Fesch, 8) and subsequently developed further. A drawing study by Botticelli in the British Museum in London (1895.0915.449) (9) provides insight into the artistic creation process for this type of Madonna painting. After the first, still more or less searching and cursory studies, a definitive cartoon of the finalized composition was probably produced, which was then reused by the workshop for further pictures of this type. 7 7, 8, 9 This probably also applied to the Madonna of the tondo under scrutiny here, because contrary to the secondary figures, for whom the infrared photos showed numerous underdrawings, no such preparatory drawings could be detected for them. We may regard this as an indication that the Madonna and her child were traced from a cartoon. In the upper area of this figure we can indeed make out a depression in the still-soft gypsum primer, which suggests tracing. The above-mentioned additive method in the composition of the picture, which makes it look somewhat reserved in its dynamic and rigid compared to Botticelli’s masterpieces, was also employed for the secondary figures, the angel and John the Baptist, who was added at a later time. We may assume that the method of using a cartoon, which we have established for the Madonna with child, was also applied for the angel holding the prayer book (11), of which two additional versions have come down to us (10, 12). 10 11 12 These paintings, too, are pictures that were serially produced in Botticelli’s workshop. However, it turns out that in the genesis of our tondo, this figure – doubtless the most beautiful in the painting – was not traced, because various pentimenti which the IR photo (13) revealed are a clear indication that a searching and at the same time creative 8 artist was at work here. The deviations in the final execution from the underdrawing primarily concern the angel’s right hand, his eyebrows, and the position of his right eye, which was probably discarded quickly in favor of the present version. If a searching artist was at work here, we may assume that our angel was the first of the three angels under comparison here, who were all painted on the basis of the same model. 9 13 This fact gives us profound insight into the authorship of the angel, in particular since there seems to be a world of difference between the execution of the angel’s garment, his face, and the realization of the other figures. In other words, there are indications that in this figure, which received its inspiration from other paintings of Botticelli with a similar theme – for instance the angel at the extreme right in Madonna del Magnificat in the Uffizi (1) from the early 1480s – Botticelli personally collaborated in this painting, at least in the concept of the picture as revealed in the underdrawing. According to our analysis, our angel is therefore the first among the three angels, not only chronologically but also with respect to his artistic quality. The figure of John the Baptist looks to a certain extent like a foreign body in our painting, especially since – contrary to the figure opposite him – he is not integrated into the tondo’s round shape, whose rhythm is broken up by his posture. Moreover, his typology also contradicts Botticelli’s repertoire in terms of form. He appears as a gentle, sensitive, graceful youth who shows no trace of any of the asceticism whose signs are written in the face of the last among the prophets in other of Botticelli’s or his contemporaries’ paintings, for example those of Verrocchio. As the X ray photographs (14) reveal, this figure was added later, but still during the production of the panel, because underneath today’s figure we can see a darker area which was once a blank space for yet another figure, for which – so the technical analysis tells us – blue was used, apparently the blue of a sky. 14 10 15 So, the original plan was for a painting where the Madonna appeared inside an abode, but one which initially – and as opposed to the final version – was to provide a view of the landscape, similar to the concept of a picture of the Madonna from Botticelli’s workshop in the Golconda collection in Tel Aviv (15). The outlines of the figure on the right clearly show that, in distinction to the final version, this figure – whether it was John the Baptist or another angel – integrated more harmoniously into the round shape of the tondo and, moreover, was placed further to the left, toward the center of the painting. Stylistically, John the Baptist, who was apparently painted last, stands out clearly from the other figures, even from the repertoire of Botticelli’s types. With the youth’s perky glance, which is directed slightly upward, as well as the actual type of his face, his character is rather reminiscent of creations from the circle of Botticelli’s main competitor, Domenico Ghirlandaio. This can be neatly demonstrated by comparing the angel’s face, looking slightly upward, in Baptism of Christ in the choir chapel in Santa Maria Novella in Florence (18) and our John the Baptist (17). There are also clear differences in the painting technique used for John the Baptist, because his underpainting is less compact than that of the other figures, whose faces are also more 16 17 18 19 vivid and ultimately more clearly modeled. Contrary to the more detailed garments of the angel and the Madonna, which have somewhat sharper and harsher shapes that make them look more three-dimensional and elegant, the folds of John the Baptist’s garment are softer and fall in more generous lines, as is also the case for the paintings in Ghirlandaio’s tradition. In contradistinction to Botticelli’s slightly open mouths – which 11 makes them look rather languishing – John the Baptist’s mouth is closed, and with his upturned gaze he looks more like a perky David in the style of Verrocchio than a visionary ascetic. . 20 21 How such a youthful John the Baptist as conceived by Botticelli’s workshop might have looked is suggested by the youthful John the Baptist in a picture of the Madonna from the Botticelli workshop in the Cleveland Museum of Fine Art, shown mirror-inverted here (22, 23). It strictly follows Botticelli’s repertoire of types around 1485. These figures are characterized by their slightly open mouth, finely drawn eyelashes, and gently articulated eyelids, flesh tones that contain the most subtle transitions, as well as magnificent heads of hair consisting of neatly painted tufts of hair with vivid curls, which gives them the appearance of having a life of their own. All these characteristics of Botticelli’s art are missing in this John the Baptist. As the X ray of our tondo (24) shows, such a figure modeled on Botticelli’s art may certainly have been planned before another hand that had not trained with Botticelli added a figure of different design later on. For this reason we tend to believe that this figure not merely shows an obviously different hand – rather, that it did not belong to a member of Botticelli’s direct circle of pupils but to one who must have trained with another workshop, possibly Ghirlandaio’s. 12 22 23 24 This makes for an interesting scenario for our tondo. Clearly, Botticelli’s workshop was due to produce a round painting whose central group of figures it had planned to base on a successful model of the master and where initially the Holy Family was supposed to be placed inside a space with a view of the landscape. A John the Baptist figure was to be placed on the right, possibly in a shape that had been designed for the round painting at the Cleveland Museum of Fine Art (22, 23). A photo montage (25) on whose right side with John the Baptist we have superimposed the mirror-inverted John the Baptist amidst a landscape from the Cleveland tondo (22, 23) may give us an idea of the approximate original and later discarded plan for our tondo. 25 26 An angel had been planned on the left side who was modeled on those in the successful pictures of the Madonna, specifically that of the Madonna del Magnificat. As the highquality underdrawings of the angel (14) which are recognizable in the IR photo indicate, 13 it is likely that the master personally set his hand to the painting, which might also be true for the execution of the angel’s beautifully painted yellow robe. He left the remaining parts of this figure as well as mother and child, who were probably traced from a cartoon, to an able member of his workshop. How the change of the concept for the right side of the picture came about, and thus also the intervention by a Florentine painter outside of the inner circle of Botticelli’s workshop, we do not know; we can only speculate as to the reasons. Considering that Botticelli’s workshop produced pictures of the Madonna serially, it would not be inconceivable for Botticelli to have sold the nearly completed tondo still in an unfinished state to a close painter colleague who needed it urgently and then completed it on his own. Commercial transactions of this kind are documented for the art production in Florence since the waning 14th century, and were even customary (cf. G. Freuler, “The Production and Trade of Late Gothic Pictures of the Madonna in Tuscany,” in: Italian Panel Painting of the Duecento and Trecento, Washington 2002, pp. 427–441, with additional literature). This scenario – however hypothetical – would furnish a plausible explanation for the overall composition with John the Baptist looking like a veritable foreign body that gives it a somewhat disharmonious appearance from today’s point of view. This would also explain the obvious stylistic break in the figure of John the Baptist, whose source appears to be found more in the tradition of Ghirlandaio than in an idea of Botticelli’s. The unknown third collaborator in this tondo, who assumed responsibility for the final version of John the Baptist, was most likely one of those artists who may have worked in a painting workshop that contributed to the frescoing of the Sistine Chapel. His style is closer to the art produced in Ghirlandaio’s environment and the less gifted Cosimo Rosselli than to Botticelli’s painting style. This becomes noticeable when we compare the painting with a tondo in the Courtauld Art Gallery in London (19), as whose author research has alternatively identified Ghirlandaio’s pupil Bartolomeo di Giovanni and Cosimo Rosselli’s pupil Agnolo di Donnino del Mazziere (alias Master of Santo Spirito). Another comparison with the face of the privately owned Pax figure of a spalliera by Agnolo di Donnino del Mazziere (here shown mirror-inverted for clarification, 16), which has a slight Botticelli touch probably for a reason, confirms our observations. Interestingly, Agnolo di Donnino del Mazziere was an assistant of the team of painters of Cosimo Rosselli at the time he was collaborating on the fresco cycle for the Sistine 14 Chapel. He was thus undoubtedly also in contact with Botticelli, who at that time was introducing revolutionary innovations especially in the execution of secular painting themes, specifically ones from ancient mythology in Florence, becoming the measure of all things in this area. With this in mind it is understandable that Agnolo di Donnino for once also made an artistic reference to Botticelli for his Pax figure. Regardless of whether it is Agnolo di Donnino’s hand behind the author of our John the Baptist (17, 21) or whether the actual author is another master from the environment of Ghirlandaio and Rosselli, the stylistic link between John the Baptist and painters from the sphere of the Florentine painting workshops working in the Sistine Chapel and, particularly, Ghirlandaio’s style establishes the approximate chronological framework for our painting – the years immediately following the frescoing of the Sistine Chapel, in other words, the period immediately after 1483. This chronological conclusion also matches the general style of the painting, which is in line with the synthetic painting style characteristic of Botticelli, which at the beginning of the 1480s had led to a somewhat linear manner of painting within paler flesh tones. In its graceful artificiality it corresponded perfectly to the poetic requirements of visually translating mythological themes, thus setting itself apart from the more naturalist tendencies of a Filippo Lippi or Verrocchio, and even more so from the painstakingly researched natural poetry of a Leonardo da Vinci. This puts our tondo, which must probably be dated between 1483 and 1485, to the beginning of a series of related pictures of the Madonna which are similar in form – but were painted considerably later, probably not until the early 16th century – and are housed in the Indianapolis Museum of Art and the Sao Paolo Museum of Art (2, 3, 27, 28). 27 28 The question of whether these three round pictures are indeed works by one and the 15 same painter, as Everett Fahy postulated in a written note to its owner, shall remain undecided for the time being. Whoever has painted these Madonnas had without a doubt access to Botticelli’s cartoons. 29,30 This qualifies at least the author of the tondo in question as a member of Botticelli’s workshop. At the time this painting was created, he no doubt worked under Botticelli’s tutelage, which is also apparent in the figure of the angel, where – as already mentioned – Botticelli seems to have collaborated personally, if only as a training supervisor. At least parts of the underdrawing and, perhaps, of the angel’s robes seem to have been painted by Botticelli, while the major part of the picture, with the exception of John the Baptist, was done by a talented assistant. In view of the close agreement of some details, the theory that – as Fahy believes – it was the same painter who also created the Madonnas in Sao Paolo and Indianapolis later on, cannot be rejected out of hand. Yet, if this were true, we would regard these paintings as works which were created outside of Botticelli’s workshop – and at least the one in Indianapolis (27, 30) probably even after his death (1510). For what catches the eye in the painting in Indianapolis is a refined modeling technique which makes the flesh tones with their heightened luminance and fleshiness look softer and gentler, similar to the way with which we are familiar from paintings by Fra Bartolomeo (tondo in the Galleria Borghese in Rome) that were created in the waning 15th century. Whether we are standing before a group of works by an unknown painter who came from Botticelli’s workshop but had gone on to became an independent and mature painter to whom the Madonna in the Golconda 16 Collection (15, 32) and the Madonna in the Bob Jones Museum collection in Greenville (12, 33, 34) can certainly be ascribed, remains an open question for the time being and a tempting hypothesis. 31 32 33 34 Based on technological analyses and the examination performed here, specifically the close stylistic review, we can conclude that our tondo must have been created in Botticelli’s workshop under the master’s supervision. Stylistically, it continues the works painted following Botticelli’s return from Rome, in particular the Madonna del 17 Magnificat in the Uffizi (1), and was probably produced around 1483–85. Botticelli’s contribution to the creation of this tondo was minimal, but we recognize his hand in the angel (underdrawing and sections of the robe). The major part of the picture was painted by a clearly gifted assistant who combined the different figures from Botticelli’s ideas for paintings into an additive composition. The hand of a third painter, who was probably not trained by Botticelli, contributed the figure of John the Baptist, discarding – for reasons unknown – an early artistic intention which had probably been inspired by Botticelli and is clearly recognizable in the X ray. Despite the serial production of tondi of this kind in Botticelli’s workshop, our round painting is one of its high-quality products from its mature period around 1483–85. With these pictures Botticelli’s workshop responded to keen demand by the members of Florence’s upper middle class, who wanted paintings of this kind for the rooms in their palazzi. Their esthetic quality and purposefully employed picture elements were to stimulate their devotional prayers. This is clearly referred to by the book held up by the angel with the text of the Magnificat, a Bible passage which – as we can read in said book in our painting – was understood as a Canticum Beate Virginis. This eulogy in honor of the Virgin was part of the customary vespers prayer, which suggests that our tondo decorated the bedroom of a rich Florentine townhouse and was meant to inspire its inhabitants to pray the Magnificat to the Virgin Mary. 35 University of Zurich, July 2013 Prof. Gaudenz Freuler 18 Illustrations: 1 Sandro Botticelli, Madonna del Magnificat, Florence, Galleria degli Uffizi 2 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna with Child and the Baptist (detail), Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo Museum of Art 3 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist (detail), Indianapolis, Indianapolis Museum of Art 4 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child, Tel Aviv, Golconda collection 5 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna and Child with John the Baptist (detail), Cleveland, Cleveland Museum of Art 6 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child and John the Baptist, Avignon, Musée du Petit Palais 7 Donatello, Madonna with Child, Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum 8 Sandro Botticelli, Virgin and Child Supported by an Angel in a Garland, Ajaccio, Musée Fesch 9 Sandro Botticelli, Madonna with Child (drawing), British Museum, London 10 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, angel (detail from Madonna with Child and Angel, unknown location 11 Sandro Botticelli and workshop, angel (details from Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 12 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, angel (detail from Madonna and Child with an Angel), Greenville, Bob Jones University Art Museum 13 IR photograph of Sandro Botticelli and workshop, angel (detail from Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 14 X ray photograph of Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 15 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child, Tel Aviv, Golconda collection 16 Agnolo di Donnino del Mazziere, Pax (detail, mirror-inverted), private collection 17 Florentine painter in Botticelli’s workshop, detail of John the Baptist (from Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 18 Domenico Ghirlandaio, two angels from Baptism of Christ, Florence, Santa Maria Novella 19 Agnolo di Donnino del Mazziere, detail from Madonna and Child with Angel, Courtauld Institute Galleries, London 19 20 Sandro Botticelli and workshop, angel (detail from Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 21 Florentine painter in Botticelli’s workshop, detail of John the Baptist (from Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 22 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna and Child with John the Baptist (detail, mirrorinverted), Cleveland, Cleveland Museum of Art 23 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna and Child with John the Baptist (detail, mirrorinverted), Cleveland, Cleveland Museum of Art 24 X ray of Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist (detail of John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 25 Photo montage of the hypothetical reconstruction of the first draft for the privately owned tondo in the Rhineland region 26 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist (detail of John the Baptist), privately owned, Rhineland region 27 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna with Child and John the Baptist, Sao Paolo, Sao Paolo Museum of Art 28 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist, Indianapolis, Indianapolis Museum of Art 29 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child and Angel and John the Baptist (detail of Madonna and child), privately owned, Rhineland region 30 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist (detail of Madonna and child), Indianapolis, Indianapolis Museum of Art 31 Sandro Botticelli, successor, Madonna with Child and John the Baptist (detail of Madonna and child), Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo Museum of Art 32 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna with Child (detail), Tel Aviv, Golconda collection 33 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna (detail from Madonna and Child with an Angel), Greenville, Bob Jones University Art Museum 34 Sandro Botticelli, workshop, Madonna and Child with an Angel, Greenville, Bob Jones University Art Museum 35 Bedroom in the Palazzo Davanzati in Florence 20