{"id":2543,"date":"2011-12-12T18:01:20","date_gmt":"2011-12-12T22:01:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.vassar.edu\/rosso\/"},"modified":"2015-06-25T21:04:28","modified_gmt":"2015-06-26T01:04:28","slug":"d-47-ornamental-panel","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/catalogues\/drawings\/d-47-ornamental-panel\/","title":{"rendered":"D.47 Ornamental Panel"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_2549\" style=\"width: 310px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color.jpg\" target=\"_blank\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-2549\" class=\"size-medium wp-image-2549\" src=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color-300x239.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"239\" srcset=\"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color-300x239.jpg 300w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color-150x119.jpg 150w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color-1024x817.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color.jpg 1927w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-2549\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">D.47 Petrarch drawing<\/p><\/div>\n<p><strong>with Scenes Illustrating the First of Six Visions of Petrarch\u2019s <em>Rima<\/em> CCCXXIII on the Death of Laura.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>c. 1534<\/p>\n<p>Oxford, Christ Church, no. 1337.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47a-Petrarch-drawing-color.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.47a<\/a><br \/> <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47b-Petrarch-drawing-bw.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.47b<\/a> bw<br \/> <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.47c-Petrarch-text-.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.47c<\/a> bw, text<\/p>\n<p>Pen and brown ink and gray-brown washes, slightly yellow, heightened with white, possibly over traces of black chalk, on light brown prepared paper, 42.6 x 53.8, composed of two sheets, the left one 31.1 wide, joined slightly right of center; creased down and across the center; in a few places the white has oxidized to black and here and there to red.\u00a0 Inscribed in ink on the plaque in the center with Petrarch\u2019s poem:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Standomi un giorno solo a la fenestra<br \/> onde cose\u2019 vedea tante e si nove\u2019,<br \/> ch\u2019 er sol di mirar\u2019 quasi gia stanco<br \/> una fera m\u2019apparve\u2019 da m\u00e2 dextra<br \/> con fronte humana da far\u2019 arder giove<br \/> cacciata da duo veltri, un nero \u00fb bi\u00e2co<br \/> che l\u2019un e l\u2019altro fianco<br \/> de la fera gentil\u2019 mordean si forte\u2019.<br \/> che\u2019n poco tempo la menaro al passo<br \/> ove chiusa in un sasso<br \/> vinse\u2019 molta bellezza acerba\u2019 morte<br \/> e mi fe sospirar\u2019 sua dura sorte\u2019.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>Beneath the poem is written in pencil: <em>di Dante<\/em>, and above it possibly faintly in pencil: <em>di Petrarca<\/em>; in the lower right corner in ink: <em>M&#8230;<\/em> which Byam Shaw has read as: <em>Michael<\/em>[angelo].<\/p>\n<p>PROVENANCE: Sir Peter Lely (Lugt 2092); General John Guise, who bequeathed the drawing to Christ Church in 1765.<\/p>\n<p>LITERATURE:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Bell, 1914, 83, as Salimbeni, and as a <em>Design for a Tapestry<\/em><em>(?)<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>G\u00f6bel, 1928, 499, ns. 1-2, establishment of tapestry workshop at Fontainebleau c. 1534.<\/p>\n<p><em>Between Renaissance and Baroque<\/em>, 1965, 110, no. 371, as Rosso, and that A.E. Popham identified the arms on the drawing as those of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine.<\/p>\n<p>B\u00e9guin, 1966, 58, as a copy after Rosso, its draftsmanship mechanical, dry, even somewhat niggardly; possibly by Boyvin.<\/p>\n<p>Byam Shaw, 1972, 45, no. 64, as Rosso.<\/p>\n<p>B\u00e9guin, in <em>EdF<\/em>, 1972, 181, under no. 204, as similar to the Louvre <em>Mars and Venus<\/em>, and if the coat-of-arms dates from before 1540, then the attribution to Rosso appears justified.<\/p>\n<p>Dumont, 1973, 341, as Rosso.<\/p>\n<p>Carroll, 1975, 18, Fig. 3, 19-20, as Rosso, probably done in 1533-1534 shortly after the discovery of Laura\u2019s tomb by Maurice Sc\u00e8ve.<\/p>\n<p>Byam Shaw, 1976, I, 66-67, no. 125, II, Pl. 89, as by Rosso and resembling a tapestry; he points out that the handwriting of the inscribed poem accords very well with the specimen of Rosso\u2019s hand reproduced in Kusenberg, 1931, Pl. XXX.<\/p>\n<p>Carroll, 1978, 28, 32, Fig. 13, as Rosso, around 1533-1534.<\/p>\n<p>McAllister Johnson, 1984, 131, Figs. 5-6, 133-135, 139, n. 4, as Rosso, and as not necessarily related to the discovery of Laura\u2019s tomb.<\/p>\n<p>Carroll, 1987, 10, 31, 208-212, no. 67, with Figs. including Color Pl., as Rosso, c. 1534.<\/p>\n<p>B\u00e9guin, 1988 (1989), 12, 13, Figs. 9-10 (details), as by Rosso.\u00a0 Franklin, 1988, 324.<\/p>\n<p>Miller, 1992, 111, commented that all the problems of this drawing had been previously solved in preparatory drawings.<\/p>\n<p>B\u00e9guin, 1994, 277, Pl. 39a, as showing the arms of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine, and as perhaps influenced by Giulio Camillo Delminio, whose first protector was the Cardinal and who wrote a commentary on Petrarch, the drawing made in 1533-1534 at the time that the Gallery of Francis I was being planned and perhaps as an illustration of Petrarch\u2019s poetry.<\/p>\n<p>Knecht, 1994, 435, as for a tapestry designed for the Cardinal of Lorraine.<\/p>\n<p>Gruber, 1995, 28, as Rosso, as undoubtedly made for a tapestry.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>The attribution of this large drawing to Rosso, first made by Byam Shaw, is easily supported by comparison with many details of his inventions in the Gallery of Francis I as well as by the over-all composition of the drawing, with its scenes surrounded by a rich border that are like the decorations in the gallery.\u00a0 At the top of the drawing, the romping children are similar to those above the <em>Education of Achilles<\/em> (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/06\/P.22-II-N-a-Achilles.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.P.22, II N a<\/a>), and the panel in the center is similar to the stuccoes alongside the <em>Revenge of Nauplius<\/em> (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/06\/P.22-III-N-a-Revenge.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.P.22, III N a<\/a>).\u00a0 In the lower corners of the drawing, the writhing youths are not specifically comparable in their poses to any in the gallery but they have precedents in Rosso\u2019s figures of Adam and Eve in the <em>Allegory of the Immaculate Conception<\/em> designed for S. Maria delle Lagrime in Arezzo (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/11\/D.32-Allegory-Uffizi.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.32<\/a>).\u00a0 However, the nudes in the Christ Church drawing are more slender, recalling those in Rosso\u2019s early version of his <em>Scene of Sacrifice<\/em> for the gallery (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.50A-Sacrifice-G\u00f6ttingen.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.50A<\/a>; <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.50B-Sacrifice-\u00c9cole-des-Beaux-Arts.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.50B<\/a>; <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.51-Scene-of-Sacrifice-Reversed.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.51<\/a>; and <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2012\/04\/E.50-Delaune-Sacrifice-Vienna.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.E.50<\/a>).<\/p>\n<p>Further supporting the attribution to Rosso is the similarity of its draughtsmanship to that of his <em>Design for a Chapel<\/em> of 1529 (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/11\/D.37a-Altar-Gathering-of-Manna.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.37a<\/a>), his <em>Mars and Venus<\/em> of 1530 (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/11\/D.42a-bw-Mars-and-Venus.-Louvre.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.42a<\/a>), and his <em>Annunciation<\/em> in the Albertina of 1531 or 1532 (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/D.43a-Annunciation-Albertina-bw.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.D.43a<\/a>), all of which are executed with pen and ink and wash, heightened with white, on dark prepared paper.\u00a0 B\u00e9guin found the execution of the drawing \u201cmechanical and dry, even somewhat niggardly,\u201d but what can instead by observed, as in the other drawings by Rosso mentioned above, is a kind of precision in the penmanship and a refinement of touch in the washes and highlights that approach the degree of finish characteristic of Rosso\u2019s oil paintings.\u00a0 No copies of Rosso\u2019s drawings show the graphic subtlety of the Christ Church drawing.\u00a0 The handwriting of the poem in the center of the drawing certainly seems to be the same as that of Rosso\u2019s 1526 letter to Michelangelo (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/catalogues\/documents\/doc-9\/\">DOC.9<\/a> and <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/DOC.9-Letter.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.DOC.9<\/a>), as noticed by Byam Shaw.<\/p>\n<p>The coat-of-arms of Cardinal Jean de Lorraine (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/Jean-de-Lorraine-coat-of-arms.png\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.Jean de Lorraine<\/a>) at the top of the drawing most likely indicates that the drawing was done in France.\u00a0 Stylistically, the Christ Church drawing appears closest to those parts of the Gallery of Francis I that would seem to have been designed before April 1535 and possibly even before April 1534.\u00a0 The small forms in the drawing recall those of the decorations of the gallery walls with the <em>Loss of Perpetual Youth<\/em> (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/06\/P.22-II-S-a-Youth-Loss.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.P.22, II S a<\/a>), the <em>Unity of the State<\/em> (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/06\/P.22-VI-S-a-Unity.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.P.22, VI S a<\/a>), and the <em>Royal Elephant<\/em> (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/06\/P.22-VI-N-a-Elephant.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.P.22, VI N a<\/a>).\u00a0 Also similar to the drawing is the early version of the <em>Scene of Sacrifice<\/em> and the <em>Nymph of Fontainebleau<\/em> engraved by Milan and Boyvin (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2012\/04\/E.103-Nymph-Paris-Ba-12.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.E.103<\/a>).\u00a0 The overall appearance of the frame in the drawing recalls most closely the frames that were designed for the Pavilion of Pomona, of 1532 or 1533, preserved in Fantuzzi\u2019s etching (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2012\/04\/Correct-Fig.E.63-Satyrs-Framing-Port.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.E.63<\/a>).\u00a0 In the left half of the drawing the monster\u2019s head closely resembles Judith\u2019s in the engraving by Boyvin (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2012\/04\/E.7-Boyvin-Judith-Vienna.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.E.7<\/a>) after a lost painting by Rosso probably of 1531 &#8211; 1532.\u00a0 It seems, therefore, that the Christ Church drawing was done in the first half of the decade that Rosso was in France.\u00a0 The extraordinary sophistication of the drawing and its relationship to the decorations in the gallery would appear to indicate that the drawing was not done immediately upon Rosso\u2019s arrival in France and not before he began considering the decorations he designed for Fontainebleau.\u00a0 It could date from about the time of the Pavilion of Pomona.<\/p>\n<p>The subject of the drawing may make it possible to date it more closely.\u00a0 Between the 29<sup>th<\/sup> of August and the 11<sup>th<\/sup> of September 1533 Francis I and his court stayed at Avignon on the way to Marseille for the celebrations of the Dauphin to Maria de\u2019 Medici.\u00a0 It was in Avignon on September 8<sup>th<\/sup> that Maurice Sc\u00e8ve \u201cdiscovered\u201d the supposed tomb of Petrarch\u2019s Laura.\u00a0 In his devotion to the poet, the king ordered a mausoleum to be built for her.<a href=\"#endref1\"><sup>1<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 Although \u201cthe (false) discovery of the false tomb\u201d and the ceremony connected to it were reported only later by Cl\u00e9ment Marot in his epigram <em>Du Roy et de Laure<\/em>, the events themselves immediately followed upon the arrival at the French court of several copies of the Aldine <em>Petrarca<\/em> printed in Venice in June of the same year.<a href=\"#endref2\"><sup>2<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 It contained the six <em>Canzone delle visioni<\/em> of which the first, Rime 323, is transcribed and illustrated in Rosso\u2019s drawing.\u00a0 In the year of the \u201cdiscovery\u201d of the tomb Marot\u2019s translations of Petrarch\u2019s <em>Visioni<\/em> appeared for the first time.<a href=\"#endref3\"><sup>3<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 The Cardinal Jean de Lorraine worked then for the protector of Italian literature at the French court, Luigi Alamanni, a Florentine exile and poet himself, who maintained at the court of Francis I the poetical and symbolic link with Petrarch\u2019s poetry.<a href=\"#endref4\"><sup>4<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 This was already an interest of the Cardinal from Lyon, the primary center of the early study of Petrarch\u2019s writings in sixteenth century France.<a href=\"#endref5\"><sup>5<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 Such was it that \u201cFran\u00e7ois monarque\u201d was identified with \u201cFran\u00e7ois Petrarch\u201d in Mellin de Saint-Gelais\u2019s eight-line poem <em>Sur le s\u00e9pulchre de Madame Laure refaict par le roy en Avignon<\/em>.<a href=\"#endref6\"><sup>6<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 Perhaps not accidental was it that the Chapel of the Holy Cross in which Laura\u2019s tomb was found was in a convent dedicated to St. Francis.<a href=\"#endref7\"><sup>7<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n<p>In the Roman document of 20 May 1535 (see Preface to D.31-34) concerned with an appeal of the authorities in Arezzo to Pope Paul III to prevent Rosso from exercising his art and to have him pay his debts related to the aborted S. Maria delle Lagrime project (see D.31-34), it is mentioned that Rosso is in Avignon (<em>civitate Avinionis<\/em>).\u00a0 There is no other record of Rosso having been in Avignon, and it seems unlikely that he was away from Paris and Fontainebleau in 1535 at a time when his work at the king\u2019s ch\u00e2teau would seem to have required his continuous attendance there.\u00a0 It would, however, be equally strange that the Roman document mentions Rosso in Avignon if this were not the case.\u00a0 It is possible that he was known to be there recently, although Rosso need not have been in Avignon at the very moment that the document of 20 May 1535 was written in Rome.\u00a0 Perhaps he was there with the king in the autumn of 1533 to look at the Tomb of Laura, and again later in relation to the building of the mausoleum that the King was interested in having built.\u00a0 It is impossible to know precisely what to make of the reference to Rosso in Avignon.\u00a0 Still, a visit by him to that city may indirectly have had something to do with the Christ Church drawing, perhaps even with the tomb for Laura that the king ordered.\u00a0 For while Petrarch\u2019s poem refers to Laura as \u201cchiusa in un sasso\u201d Rosso has conceived this \u201crock\u201d as a splendid sarcophogus.<\/p>\n<p>Although the Christ Church drawing technically resembles the <em>Mars and Venus<\/em>, it is not necessary to conclude that the former, like the latter, was made as an independent work of art.\u00a0 The circumstances for which the Louvre drawing was made &#8211; to be sent from Venice to Francis I to give the King an idea of Rosso\u2019s talent &#8211; are not ones that would seem also those for the making of this drawing for the Cardinal of Lorraine, who could easily have known of Rosso\u2019s abilities from other sources.\u00a0 If it were in a sense a miniature, one might expect it to have been done on a single sheet of paper instead of on two pasted together.\u00a0 The text might also have been more carefully arranged to fill the plaque on which it is written.\u00a0 Nor, given its technique, can the drawing be considered a <em>disegno di stampa<\/em> from which an engraving would have been intended.\u00a0 More likely the drawing was executed to give an idea of a work that would have been realized in another medium or media and on a larger scale.<\/p>\n<p>Byam Shaw\u2019s comment in 1976, based partly upon my remarks to him, that the drawing was probably made for a wall decoration to be executed in fresco and stucco rather than for a tapestry, no longer seems to me to be true.\u00a0 While some sixteenth century French wall paintings have inscriptions, none, so far as I know, have long texts like the one that appears in the Christ Church drawing.\u00a0 None of Rosso\u2019s known wall decorations have such passages.\u00a0 However, it is not uncommon for sixteenth century French tapestries to have lengthy texts set on plaques, the arrangement derived from an older tapestry tradition.\u00a0 It is, therefore, likely that Rosso\u2019s drawing was made as a <em>modello<\/em> for a tapestry<a href=\"#endref8\"><sup>8<\/sup><\/a>.\u00a0 Bell was already of this opinion in 1914.<\/p>\n<p>Although there is no documentary record of Rosso\u2019s having been occupied with tapestries, nor is such an occupation mentioned by Vasari, there is no reason to believe because of this silence that the opportunity to design tapestries was not available to him.\u00a0 We now know that the Vienna tapestries after six of the wall areas in the Gallery of Francis I were begun before Rosso died.\u00a0 As they were woven at Fontainebleau, it is very possible that they were started under his direction.<a href=\"#endref9\"><sup>9<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 The Christ Church drawing may give proof of other, and possibly earlier, work with tapestries, and at Fontainebleau, where, according to G\u00f6bel, 1928, 499, ns. 1-2, a tapestry workshop was established around 1534.\u00a0 That the project represented by this drawing was never fulfilled, as seems to be the case, may be due to the fact that just around 1534 Rosso became too occupied with other projects for Francis I at Fontainebleau to be also employed elsewhere, as at Avignon, perhaps, and by someone else.<\/p>\n<p>The tapestry project for the Cardinal of Lorraine may well have been more extensive than is indicated by this drawing, for the poem it illustrates is actually the first of a set of six poems by Petrarch constituting six visions, each of which is an allegory on the death of Laura, the set ending with a congedo of three lines:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Canzon, tu puoi ben dire:<br \/> Queste sei visioni al signor mio<br \/> \u00e0n fatto un dolce di morir desio.<br \/> (Cansone, you may say:<br \/> These six visions have given to my lord<br \/> A sweet desire to die, as a reward.)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>As tapestries were generally made in sets to decorate a room it is probable that the Christ Church drawing is for one tapestry of a projected set of six.<a href=\"#endref10\"><sup>10<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 Perhaps this drawing was the only <em>modello<\/em> made before this enterprise was abandoned.\u00a0 Had it been continued, large cartoons would have to have been made.\u00a0 The cartoon made from this drawing might have shown the inscribed poem differently spaced to fill the area in which it is set, and perhaps translated into French.\u00a0 Around 1534, Rosso and his assistants were busy making similar cartoons for the frescoes to be executed in the gallery at Fontainebleau (see <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/catalogues\/paintings\/p-22\/summary-on-the-construction-and-decoration-of-the-gallery-of-francis-i\/\">P.22, Summary on the Construction and Decoration of the Gallery of Francis I<\/a>).\u00a0 Cartoons for the related tapestries were begun soon afterwards (see <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/catalogues\/paintings\/p-22\/the-tapestries\/\" target=\"_blank\">P.22 Tapestries<\/a>).\u00a0 At this time, Rosso and his studio could hardly have been expected to make six tapestry cartoons also for the Cardinal of Lorraine.<a href=\"#endref11\"><sup>11<\/sup><\/a>\u00a0 The drawing may very likely have been done around 1534.<\/p>\n<div>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr align=\"left\" size=\"1\" width=\"33%\" \/>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref1\"><\/a><sup>1<\/sup> See V.-L. Saulnier, <em>Maurice Sc\u00e8ve (ca. 1500-1560)<\/em>, Paris, 1948, I, 38-47; <em>The French Renaissance<\/em>, London, 1969, 256, 316, n. 64; and Balsamo, 2006, 270, 272.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref2\"><\/a><sup>2<\/sup> Balsamo, 2006, 270.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref3\"><\/a><sup>3<\/sup> Robert Leushuis, <em>Visions of Ruin: Vanitas Vanitatum in Du Bellay\u2019s Songe and Petrarch\u2019s Canzone Delle Visioni (Rime 323)<\/em>, <em>Petrarch and His Readers in the Renaissance<\/em>, edited by Karl A. E. Enenkel and Jan Papy, Leiden and Boston, 2006, pp. 234.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref4\"><\/a><sup>4<\/sup> Balsamo, 2006, 270, 273.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref5\"><\/a><sup>5<\/sup> On the city of Lyons and its four annual fairs as the \u201cprincipal gathering of Italian trade,\u201d see Lucien Romier, \u201cLyons and Cosmopolitanism at the Beginning of the French Renaissance,\u201d in <em>French Humanism 1470-1600<\/em>, ed. Werner L. Gundersheimer, London, 1969, 91-94.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref6\"><\/a><sup>6<\/sup> Balsano, 206, 273.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref7\"><\/a><sup>7<\/sup> V.-L. Saulnier, <em>Maurice Sc\u00e8ve (ca. 1500-1560)<\/em>, Paris, 1948, I, pp. 40-41.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref8\"><\/a><sup>8<\/sup> See the <em>Birth of St. Stephen <\/em>dated 1532 in Toulouse (Viatte, 1965-66, no. 6, and Fig.).\u00a0 Earlier sixteenth century French tapestries contain many long inscriptions (Viatte, 1965-66, nos. 1, 3, 45, Figs.), and they continue to appear in tapestries of the 1540s (Viatte, 1965-66, nos. 7, 8, 9, Figs.; see also Standen, in <em>Actes<\/em>, 1975, 87-98, Figs. 2, 6, 14).<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref9\"><\/a><sup>9<\/sup> See the discussion of the Vienna tapestries at <a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/catalogues\/paintings\/p-22\/the-tapestries\/\" target=\"_blank\">P.22, The Tapestries<\/a>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref10\"><\/a><sup>10<\/sup> For a set of six tapestries in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, probably North French and of the first half of the sixteenth century, based on Petrarch\u2019s <em>Trionfi<\/em>, see Panofsky, 1965, 142-145, with bibliography.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n<p><a name=\"endref11\"><\/a><sup>11<\/sup> For a smaller drawing, but similar in media and composition, however without any text, see <em>Old Master Drawings<\/em>, Sotheby\u2019s, New York, 26 January 2011 (<a href=\"http:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/files\/2011\/12\/Sothebys-Trojans.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">Fig.Sotheby\u2019s Trojans<\/a>).\u00a0 Although this drawing, showing the salamander <em>impresa<\/em> of Francis I, is presented as a \u201cdesign for a wall decoration,\u201d meaning to be executed in painting and stucco, it is possible that it was intended for a tapestry, like the Christ Church drawing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>with Scenes Illustrating the First of Six Visions of Petrarch\u2019s Rima CCCXXIII on the Death of Laura. c. 1534 Oxford, Christ Church, no. 1337. Fig.D.47a Fig.D.47b bw Fig.D.47c bw, text Pen and brown ink and gray-brown washes, slightly yellow, heightened with white, possibly over traces of black chalk, on light brown prepared paper, 42.6 x [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":13,"featured_media":0,"parent":820,"menu_order":51,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"footnotes":""},"class_list":["post-2543","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2543","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/13"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2543"}],"version-history":[{"count":23,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2543\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":11241,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/2543\/revisions\/11241"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/820"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pages.vassar.edu\/rosso\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2543"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}