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673Visual
Documentation
13.7 Strada’s Commissions of Visual Documentation: Antiquity
13.7.1 Acquisitions in Rome: Drawings of Coins and Sculpture
Apart from the autograph drawings by celebrated Italian masters of his time
and from their workshops which Strada had been able to acquire by favour
of certain chance opportunities, the graphic section of Strada’s Musaeum also
included series of drawings and illustrated manuscripts that he had commis-
sioned himself. These drawings were not considered as works of art as such,
but functioned to document both the principal monuments of Antiquity and
the most outstanding achievements of the art of his own time. Such documen-
tation was the fruit of a deliberate programme of acquisition, a programme
which itself probably resulted from Strada’s conversations with his patron,
Hans Jakob Fugger. Fugger had commissioned Strada to set up and organize a
Corpus of drawings of ancient Roman coinage, a project which continued into
the 1560s and resulted in literally thousands of numismatic drawings. During
Strada’s travels to Lyon and Rome he remained constantly engaged in the per-
fection of this Magnum ac novum opus, both providing drawings himself, and
having them drawn under his own supervision by the various draughtsmen he
employed to this end. As we have seen earlier, one of these draughtsmen was
the young Giovan Battista Armenini. In his account of Strada’s purchase of
Perino’s drawings, Armenini explains that he could study these at leisure, be-
cause at the time he was living in Strada’s house, employed in drawing:
…certain antique medals of bronze, and of gold, in watercolours, in the
size of a palmo; which copies with their reverses, he then sent to the Fug-
gers, wealthy merchants of Antwerp, a powerful city of Flanders, first hav-
ing collected them into most beautiful books…72
Armenini was only one among many of the young artists that had flocked to
Rome in those years who were employed by Strada in these labours, and the
execution of the numismatic drawings was only one of the tasks he set them.
Armenini relates how Strada had them produce a set of drawings documenting
the decoration of the Vatican Loggia—to be discussed below—a set of which
he himself took ‘to Spain to the great court of King Philip’, together with:
…countless other drawings, which he bought everywhere or which he com-
missioned us to draw for him: plans [probably both city maps and ground
72 Armenini 1587, pp. 64–65. Armenini’s testimony should be handled with some care: it was
published and probably written thirty years after the fact, and his memory was not quite
accurate: witness his locating the Fuggers in Antwerp instead of in Augsburg; and there is
no other indication that Strada visited Spain after his stay in Rome in the mid-1550s.
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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