64, No. 2316; again a silver point drawing of a Virgin
and child drawn over again with the pen in the His
de la Salle collection also in the Louvre, No. 101.
(See Vicomte BOTH DE TAUZIA, Notice des dessins
de la collection His de la Salle, exposes au Louvre.
Paris 1881, pp. 80, 81.) This drawing is, it is true,
traditionally ascribed to Raphael, but the author
of the catalogue very justly points out its great
resemblance with the sketches for Madonnas in the
British Museum which are indisputably Leonardo’s.
Some of these have been published by Mr. HENRY WALLIS
in the Art Journal, New Ser. No. 14, Feb. 1882.
If the non-existence of the two pictures here alluded
to justifies my hypothesis that only studies for such
pictures are meant by the text, it may also be supposed
that the drawings were made for some comrade in VERROCCHIO’S
atelier. (See VASARI, Sansoni’s ed. Florence
1880. Vol. IV, p. 564): “E
perche a Lerenzo piaceva fuor di modo la maniera di
Lionardo, la seppe cosi bene imitare, che niuno fu
che nella pulitezza e nel finir l’opere con
diligenza l’imitasse piu di lui.”
Leonardo’s notes give me no opportunity of discussing
the pictures executed by him in Florence, before he
moved to Milan. So the studies for the unfinished
picture of the Adoration of the Magi—in
the Uffizi, Florence—cannot be described
here, nor would any discussion about the picture in
the Louvre “La Vierge aux Rochers”
be appropriate in the absence of all allusion to it
in the MSS. Therefore, when I presently add a
few remarks on this painting in explanation of the
Master’s drawings for it, it will be not merely
with a view to facilitate critical researches about
the picture now in the National Gallery, London, which
by some critics has been pronounced to be a replica
of the Louvre picture, but also because I take this
opportunity of publishing several finished studies
of the Master’s which, even if they were not
made in Florence but later in Milan, must have been
prior to the painting of the Last Supper. The
original picture in Paris is at present so disfigured
by dust and varnish that the current reproductions
in photography actually give evidence more of the
injuries to which the picture has been exposed than
of the original work itself. The wood-cut given
on p. 344, is only intended to give a general notion
of the composition. It must be understood that
the outline and expression of the heads, which in the
picture is obscured but not destroyed, is here altogether
missed. The facsimiles which follow are from
drawings which appear to me to be studies for “La
Vierge aux Rochers.”
1. A drawing in silver point on brown toned paper of a woman’s head looking to the left. In the Royal Library at Turin, apparently a study from nature for the Angel’s head (Pl. XLII).
2. A study of drapery for the left leg of the same figure, done with the brush, Indian ink on greenish paper, the lights heightened with white.