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Friday, November 15, 2024

Drawing a British man paid less than £1,000 for could sell for £2MILLION after it was confirmed as Michelangelo’s earliest sketch


A drawing a British man paid less than £1,000 for is set to sell for £2million after it was confirmed to be the earliest-known sketch by Michelangelo.

The drawing, entitled ‘Study of Jupiter’, depicts the profile of a bearded man wearing a toga, holding a staff and pointing at the viewer.

The work was sold in Paris in 1989 as an unidentified work of Florentine art and was bought by the British collector for a three figure sum.

The unnamed collector thought nothing of it until several years ago when an art expert saw it and suggested it could have been by Renaissance master Michelangelo.

Drawing a British man paid less than £1,000 for could sell for £2MILLION after it was confirmed as Michelangelo’s earliest sketch

The drawing, entitled ‘Study of Jupiter’, depicts the profile of a bearded man wearing a toga, holding a staff and pointing at the viewer

 

The unnamed collector thought nothing of it until several years ago when an art expert saw it and suggested it could have been by Renaissance master Michelangelo (pictured)

The unnamed collector thought nothing of it until several years ago when an art expert saw it and suggested it could have been by Renaissance master Michelangelo (pictured)

It can be attributed to Michelangelo because of its subject material and style of draughtsmanship

It can be attributed to Michelangelo because of its subject material and style of draughtsmanship

The 8.7ins by 6ins drawing was then studied by leading scholars including a history of art professor at Cambridge University and former director of the National Galleries of Scotland, Sir Timothy Clifford.

The research has confirmed that it is a very rare Michelangelo work and was produced by him when he was aged 15 in 1490.

It can be attributed to Michelangelo because of its subject material and style of draughtsmanship, which are synonymous with his early development such as the use of two shades of brown ink and stylus lines on paper.

At the time he was an apprentice artist based in the Florence studio of master fresco painter Domenico Ghirlandaio.

Michelangelo burnt many of his early drawings as he wanted to destroy any evidence of the immense labour that went into his work, lending credence to the notion that he was a fully-formed genius.

Only around 600 drawings survive from the entirety of Michelangelo’s life, comparatively few compared to the 4,000 by contemporary Leonardo da Vinci.

The drawing now for sale foreshadows Michelangelo’s most famous works — Pieta, David and the frescoes on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome.

The drawing has now returned to Florence where it will be sold by London art dealer Milo Dickinson on the vendor’s behalf.

Mr Dickinson said: ‘Michelangelo’s works only come onto the market every ten or twenty years.

‘The majority of them are in museum or exclusive private collections so to have this really is special.

‘We have had an amazing response to the work from collectors all around the world. His works have sold for far more than two million so we don’t believe it is a huge price for this work.

We have worked for 30 years with the works of the masters. We have worked with art by Botticelli and Rubens among others.

‘But working with a Michelangelo takes it to another level. He is probably the greatest Western artist ever.

‘To be involved with a piece like this is such an honour for us.’

Prior to this drawing’s discovery, the earliest accepted known-work of Michelangelo was A Study of Two Figures, After Giotto, dated to around 1491 which is currently in the Louvre Museum in Paris.

However many of his early works do not survive.

Michelangelo’s nephew, also called Leonardo, recalled that at the end of his uncle’s life he burnt almost all the works in his Rome studio in two large bonfires.

It remains unknown how this work survived and where it was stored before the Paris sale in 1989.

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