Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Taddeo

Federico Zuccaro
Portrait Drawing
possibly a portrait of Federico's elder brother, Taddeo Zuccaro
1560s
Morgan Library

Today's scholars and museum curators are reluctant to endorse traditional attributions of identity in old master drawings. The drawing above has traditionally been identified as a portrait of the fresco painter Taddeo Zuccaro (1529-1586) made by his prolific younger brother Federico Zuccaro (1541-1609). The fact that a scholarly institution at the level of the Morgan Library should be willing to entertain this identification certainly encourages a measure of faith in the tradition. Taddeo had established himself in Rome by the late 1540s. Federico joined him there and became a partner in his thriving workshop about ten years later. Taddeo's own surviving drawings (as below) are nearly all linked to known fresco projects.

Taddeo Zuccaro
Study of women
1550s
Morgan Library

Taddeo Zuccaro
Study of soldiers
1563
Morgan Library

Taddeo Zuccaro
Flight of angels (with feather)
 1556-58
Rijksmuseum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Mythological figures
 1561
National Gallery, Washington, DC

Taddeo Zuccaro
Nymphs
16th century
Metropolitan Museum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Nude study (recto)
1550
Metropolitan Museum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Nude study (verso)
1550
Metropolitan Museum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Conversion of Paul
1558-65
Getty

Taddeo Zuccaro
St. Paul restoring Eutychus to life
1557-58
Metropolitan Museum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Martyrdom of St. Paul
1557-58
Metropolitan Museum

Taddeo Zuccaro
Joseph & Potiphar's Wife
16th century
Metropolitan Museum