On the
London Scene: Da Vinci 'Horse and Rider' Drawing Fetches $11
Million
LONDON - "Horse and Rider" by Leonardo da Vinci sold at
Christie's for £8,143,750 July 10, a world auction record for a
drawing by the artist and equaling the price established at
Christie's last year for the most expensive Old Master drawing
ever sold.
The superb silverpoint study of a horse and rider, measuring 120
by 78 millimeters, was the most significant drawing by the
Renaissance master to be sold at auction since the 1930s and is
also one of the first expressions of his interest in horses.
"Horse and Rider" is a preparatory study for Leonardo's first
great composition, the large unfinished panel, "The Adoration of
the Magi," now in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. Among the
earlier drawings to have survived from the artist's first
maturity, it also explores wider themes that were to become the
hallmark of the master's genius.
"The Adoration of the Magi" was commissioned in March 1481 as an
altarpiece for the monks of San Donato a' Scopeto outside
Florence, and abandoned when the artist left the city later that
year. Work on this commission marked the emergence of Leonardo as
an independent artist after his apprenticeship in Verrocchio's
studio.
This sheet had been part of the collection of the Brown family
for more than seventy years. Bought by John Nicholas Brown at
auction in 1928, the drawing has been in the United States ever
since. It is now being sold for estate planning purposes on
behalf of his son, J. Carter Brown, the former director of the
National Gallery of Washington, himself a distinguished
connoisseur.
Depicting energetic engagement between horse and rider, this
sheet is beautifully observed. The legs of the animal are lightly
sketched and the virtuoso foreshortening of the horse, combined
with the emphasis on the powerful torso, expresses Leonardo's
preoccupation with perspective in the composition of "The
Adoration of the Magi."
As a dedicated observer of nature, Leonardo sought to prove that
the accurate representation of figures in motion was as efficient
a means of establishing perspective as the science of geometry.
The bodies of the horse and rider are drawn around a vertical
axis, faintly visible, running from the left of the horse's head
down to the lower edge where the front legs seem to converge.