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masters such as Titian and Veronese were ‘weitberuembt’, ‘widely renowned’.
Its presence in Munich does, however, indicate that Strada did hope that he
might interest his Bavarian patrons in the acquisition of the entire collection
or of some of its individual components.
The list gives no indication at all of the provenance of the collection or of
the individual works. Since Strada could offer it to the Duke, it was either a
collection in his own possession or a collection to which he had privileged
access. It lists forty-two paintings, mostly full-sized canvases, but also a few
smaller items, and then continues with a not inconsiderable quantity of other
materials, including some fat volumes of drawings and prints, some illustrated
books, some coins and medals, some sculpture—mostly small bronzes—and
some miscellaneous Kunstkammer items. What is perhaps the most fascinat-
ing object in the list, a ‘Kunstschrank’ or cabinet of inlaid wood filled or deco-
rated with antique marbles, allows to link the list more definitely to Strada. Its
contents included two small antique marble heads of ‘2 khinder eins lacht /
das andre waintt’. This relates the list to the earlier inventory of the Bussoni
collection, which included ‘Capita duorum puerorum unus eorum qui ridet
et alter qui ploret’: ‘the heads of two children, one of whom laughs, the other
cries’. As we have seen above, that inventory, dated March 1562, is in Latin and
commented in German; it is likewise preserved in Munich and can be associ-
ated with Strada. The later presence of these sculptures in such a monumental
cabinet—which would have taken some considerable time to have designed
and made—is an argument that the document may be later in date than
has been assumed on the basis of its presence among documents relating to
Strada’s acquisitions for Duke Albrecht mostly dating from 1568–1570. An ad-
ditional argument for a later dating is the adjective ‘weitberuembt’ or ‘widely
famous, applied to the painter Niccolò Frangipane, one of Titian’s lesser pupils
known to have been active only from 1563 onward. This suggests a date at the
earliest in the early or mid-1570s.
Most of the material included in the list—the antiquities, the coins and
medals, the volumes of prints and drawings and the books on architecture
and fortification—corresponds closely to what we know from other sources to
have been in Strada’s collection. In his recent catalogue entry on the portraits
of Jacopo and Ottavio Strada Duncan Bull has accepted Klara Garas’ and—
following Garas—Xavier Salomon’s suggestion that the list is in fact an inven-
tory of (part of) Strada’s own collection doubling as dealer’s stock’.93 This is
indeed a most plausible explanation: the Munich list is one of several copies of
93 Garas 1990, p. 18; Campenhausen 2003, pp. 12 and 16–21; Salomon 2006, p. 22; Bull 2009a,
p. 212.
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Buch Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court - The Antique as Innovation, Band 2"
Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court
The Antique as Innovation, Band 2
- Titel
- Jacopo Strada and Cultural Patronage at the Imperial Court
- Untertitel
- The Antique as Innovation
- Band
- 2
- Autor
- Dirk Jacob Jansen
- Verlag
- Brill
- Ort
- Leiden
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-90-04-35949-9
- Abmessungen
- 15.8 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 542
- Kategorien
- Biographien
- Kunst und Kultur
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 11 The Musaeum: Strada’s Circle 547
- 11.1 Strada’s House 547
- 11.2 High-ranking Visitors: Strada’s Guest Book and Ottavio’s Stammbuch 548
- 11.3 ‘Urbanissime Strada’: Accessibility of and Hospitality in the Musaeum 554
- 11.4 Intellectual Associates 556
- 11.5 Strada’s Confessional Position 566
- 11.6 Contacts with Members of the Dynasty 570
- 12 The Musaeum: its Contents 576
- 12.1 Introduction 576
- 12.2 Strada’s own Descriptions of his Musaeum 577
- 12.3 Strada’s Acquisitions for Duke Albrecht V of Bavaria 580
- 12.4 Strada’s own Cabinet of Antiquities 592
- 12.5 Acquisitions of Other Materials in Venice 599
- 12.6 Commissions in Mantua 610
- 12.7 ‘Gemalte Lustigen Tiecher’: Contemporary Painting in Strada’s Musaeum 615
- 12.8 Conclusion 628
- 13 Books, Prints and Drawings: The Musaeum as a centre of visualdocumentation 629
- 13.1 Introduction 629
- 13.2 Strada’s Acquisition of Drawings 630
- 13.3 ‘Owls to Athens’: Some Documents Relating to Strada’s GraphicCollection 634
- 13.4 The Contents of Strada’s Collection of Prints and Drawings 641
- 13.5 Later Fate of Strada’s Prints and Drawings 647
- 13.6 Drawings Preserved in a Context Linking Them withStrada 649
- 13.7 Strada’s Commissions of Visual Documentation: Antiquity 673
- 13.8 Strada’s Commissions of Visual Documentation: Contemporary Architecture and Decoration 692
- 13.9 Images as a Source of Knowledge 711
- 13.10 Conclusion 717
- 14 ‘Ex Musaeo et Impensis Jacobi Stradae, S.C.M. Antiquarius, CivisRomani’: Strada’s Frustrated Ambitions as a Publisher 719
- 14.1 Is There Life beyond the Court? 719
- 14.2 Strada’s Family 719
- 14.3 Ottavio Strada’s Role 725
- 14.4 The Publishing Project: Strada Ambitions as a Publisher 728
- 14.5 The Musaeum as an Editorial Office? 739
- 14.6 Financing the Programme 752
- 14.7 The Index Sive Catalogus 760
- 14.8 Strada’s Approach of Christophe Plantin 775
- 14.9 The Rupture with Ottavio 781
- 14.10 Strada’s Testamentary Disposition 783
- 14.11 Conclusion: The Aftermath 786
- 15 Le Cose dell’antichità : Strada as a Student of Antiquity 799
- 16 Strada & Co.: By Appointment to His Majesty the Emperor 830
- 16.1 Strada as an Imperial Antiquary and Architect 830
- 16.2 Strada’s Role as an Agent 836
- 16.3 Strada as an Independent Agent 840
- 16.4 ‘Ex Musaeo Iacobi de Strada’: Study, Studio, Workshop, Office, Showroom 843
- 16.5 Strada’s Influence: An Agent of Change 849
- 16.6 Conclusion: Strada’s Personality 863
- 16.7 Epilogue: Back to the Portrait 868
- Appendices 877
- Chronological List of Sources 915
- Bibliography 932
- List of Illustrations 986
- Index 1038