Via: http://andrewhopkinsart.blogspot.de
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Leonardo da Vinci & Salai
Portrait of Salai (Gian Giacomo Caprotti) as Saint Sebastian 
Gian  Giacomo Caprotti da Oreno (nicknamed Salai (Little Devil). Gian entered  Leonardo's household around 1490 at the age of 10. Leonardo himself has  recorded in MS. C the precise date of this event. "Giacomo came to live  with me on St Mary Magdalene's day (22 July) 1490, aged ten years. The  second day I had two shirts cut out for him, a pair of hose and a  jerkin, and when I put aside some money to pay for these things he stole  the money (4 lire) out of the purse; and I could never make him confess  although I was quite certain of it. The day after I went to sup with  Giacomo Andrea, and the said Giacomo supped for two and did mischief for  four, for he broke three cruets and spilled the wine." And then in the  margin, ladro, bugiardo, ostinato, ghiotto--thief, liar, obstinate,  glutton.
Self portrait of Salai as Saint John the Baptist
Salai  played the role of adoptive son, protégé, friend, helper, student and  quite possibly, lover to Leonardo da Vinci." He was described by Vasari  as "a graceful and beautiful youth with fine curly hair, in which  Leonardo greatly delighted." The relationship was not an easy one. A  year later Leonardo made a list of the boy¹s misdemeanors, calling him  "a thief, a liar, stubborn, and a glutton." The "Little Devil" had made  off with money and valuables on at least five occasions, and spent a  fortune on apparel, among which twenty four pairs of shoes.  Nevertheless, il Salaino remained his companion, servant and assistant  for the next twenty nine years until the artist death, and Leonardo's  notebooks during their early years contain pictures of a handsome,  curly-haired adolescent. 
Salai as Saint John the Baptist
Salai as Bacchus Leonardo da Vinci "Bacchus" 1510 - 1515
Leonardo da Vinci (Salai) as "St. John the Baptist" 1513 - 1516
Leonardo  used the scheming, ambitious and selfish Salai as a model for his St  John the Baptist. Every critic has laboriously pointed out that this is  not a conventional presentation of the Baptist, and we must try to  answer the question why Leonardo, who attached so much importance to the  interpretation of a subject, has created an image almost blasphemously  unlike the fiery ascetic of the Gospels. The exotic Salai with his  feminine face and ringlet curls has a mysterious smile and points up and  over his shoulder. It is believed that the portrait had the cross and  fur pelts painted latter. So Salai as St John the Baptist would have  been 
originally nude. Also this portrait was painted for  Leonardo and was not a commissioned piece of artwork. It is believed to  be the last painting Leonardo painted and keep with him at all times. It  is said the portrait was hung along side of the more famous Mona Lisa  in Leonardo's bedroom in France. Salai as Saint John the Baptist is  perhaps most famous for the enigmatic look and smile on Salai's face.  Hes expression and the meaning behind it have survived for 500 years as  one of the greatest mysteries in art history. 
Leonardo da Vinci, Drawing of Salai
Leonardo da Vinci, Drawing of Salai
Leonardo da Vinci, Drawing of Salai
Leonardo  was said to have seen Salai drawing in a field and then approached his  father to train Salai as his assistant and apprentice. Salai would have  only been a peasant whose family was not too dissimilar to Leonardo’s  mothers side. Leonardo saw some potential in the boy and wanted to give  Salai the opportunity to do something with his life. Salai was also like  Da Vinci himself said to be incredibly attractive. 
What was  the extent of the relationship with Salai and Leonardo? No definite  proof exists of Leonardo's homosexuality, there are plenty of  indications, in his male erotic drawings as well as in his writings,  that he was attracted to males. When he was twenty-four years old,  Leonardo was arrested, along with several young companions, on the  charge of sodomy. Homosexuality was common in Florence. The Office of  the Night (Ufficiali di notte) which was active in Florence from 1432 to  1502, which contains documents about more than 16,000 men implicated in  sodomy, of whom nearly 3,000 were convicted.  Thus, in a city of only  40,000 inhabitants, the majority of men were incriminated for  engaging in homosexual relations at least once during their  lifetimes.  Several things indicate that Leonardo was probably gay. He  never married or showed any interest in women; indeed, he wrote in his  notebooks that male-female intercourse disgusted him. His anatomical  drawings naturally include the sexual organs of both genders, but those  of the male exhibit much more extensive attention. Finally, Leonardo  surrounded himself with beautiful young male assistants, such as Salai  and Melzi. Leonardo's  art reflects an appreciation of androgynous  beauty. It has, therefore, been assumed that he was a homosexual.
Leonardo da Vinci, Drawing of Salai
Leonardo da Vinci, Drawing of Old and Young "Salai"
A drawing of Salai in fancy-dress costume by Leonardo da Vinci
Allegory of Pleasure and Pain / Androgyn corpus with two heads, Leonardo de Vinci and Salai 
As  a young man Leonardo was very attractive and one of his first  biographers  Vasari writes "there is something supernatural in the  accumulation in one individual of so much beauty, grace, and might. With  his right hand he could twist an iron horseshoe as if it were made of  lead. In his liberality, he welcomed and gave food to any friend, rich  or poor." His kindness, his sweet nature, his eloquence ("his speech  could bend in any direction the most obdurate of wills") his regal  magnanimity, his sense of humor, his love of wild creatures, his  "terrible strength in argument, sustained by intelligence and memory,"  the subtlety of his mind "which never ceased to devise inventions," his  aptitude for mathematics, science, music, poetry. What's more, Leonardo  was a man of "physical beauty beyond compare." In 1466, at the age of  fourteen, Leonardo was apprenticed to the artist Andrea di Cione, known  as Verrocchio whose workshop was "one of the finest in Florence".   Leonardo himself may have been the model for two works by Verrocchio,  including the bronze statue of David in the Bargello, and the Archangel  Michael in Tobias and the Angel.
Young Leonardo is said to have model for this Statue of David by Verrocchio 
Young Leonardo is said to have model as Archangel Michael for this painting by Verrocchio with his white dog by his feet
It  is believed that Leonardo Da Vinci painted himself as a young man in  his: Adoration of the Magi (unfinished) - 1481 - 1482. Lower right  corner looking away. 
Francesco  Botticini: Tóbiás and the three Archangels with Leonardo da Vinci  painted as the first angel and his white dog by his feet, Galleria degli  Uffizi, Florence Tempera on wood 1470
Young Leonardo 1468
The  new self portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, which was painted between 1475  and 1480 and can be found in Washington, The National Gallery of Art,  Note white dog
In all of Da Vinci's journals, the name 'Salai' was used most. Salaì's name also appears (crossed out) on the back of an erotic drawing (ca. 1513) by the artist, The Incarnate Angel, at one time in the collection of Queen Victoria. It is seen as a humorous and revealing take on his major work, St. John the Baptist, also a work and a theme imbued with homoerotic overtones by a number of art critics. Another erotic work, found on the verso of a foglio in the Atlantic Codex, depicts il Salaino's behind, towards which march several penises on two legs (Augusto Marinoni, in "Io Leonardo", Mondadori, Milano 1974, pp.288, 310). Salai stole things, broke things, lied, and was generally a devil; if he were a mere student or servant he would have been fired. Instead of punishing him Leonardo showered him with finest of clothes–this would have been unusual behavior toward a servant or pupil. It's not hard to see how this bad boy would be attractive to Leonardo. Modern critics contend that Leonardo's love of boys was well-known even in the sixteenth century. Rocke reports that in a fictional dialogue on l'amore masculino (male love) written by the contemporary art critic and theorist Gian Paolo Lomazzo, Leonardo appears as one of the protagonists and declares, "Know that male love is exclusively the product of virtue which, joining men together with the diverse affections of friendship, makes it so that from a tender age they would enter into the manly one as more stalwart friends." In the dialogue, the interlocutor inquires of Leonardo about his relations with his assistant, Salai, "Did you play the game from behind which the Florentines love so much?"
In 1499 he accompanied him to Mantua, Venice and Florence. By 1505 he had achieved some fame as a painter; Alvise Ciocha, an agent of Isabella d'Este, Marchioness of Mantua, described him as 'very able for his years' and invited him to advise Pietro Perugino who was working for her. He accompanied Leonardo to Rome in 1513 and three years later to France, with Francesco Melzi. In 1519, following his master's death, Salai settled in Milan on property that Leonardo had bequeathed him. He died a violent death. An inventory of his possessions shows that he inherited many works by Leonardo, including the Mona Lisa and the Infant St John the Baptist (both Paris, Louvre). No signed works by Caprotti are known; documents mention two paintings of the Penitent St Jerome (untraced) in the monastery of S Gerolamo in Milan. It is assumed that his work adheres closely to that of Leonardo. According to this hypothesis, the Virgin and Child with St Anne (Los Angeles, UCLA, Wight A. G.) and St John the Baptist (Milan, Ambrosiana), copies of paintings by Leonardo (both Paris, Louvre), have been attributed to him.
The Incarnate Angel
Il  Salaino's name also appears (crossed out) on the back of an erotic  drawing (ca. 1513) by the artist, The Incarnate Angel, at one time in  the collection of Queen Victoria. It is seen as a humorous and revealing  take on his major work, St. John the Baptist, also a work and a theme  imbued with homoerotic overtones by a number of art critics such as  Martin Kemp and James Saslow (Saslow, 1986, passim). Drawn late in  Leonardo's life, probably between circa 1513 and circa 1515 when he was  living at the Vatican in Rome (he died in France in 1519 at age 67), the  black chalk or charcoal rendering shows an angelic adolescent with  deep-set doe eyes, pouty collagen lips and a cascade of fluffy hair. The  feminine boy, vaguely tipsy, looks like he might have just rolled out  of bed -- which, given the crude rendering of an erect phallus in the  torso's sketchier lower extremities, is entirely possible. (Leonardo's  student and reputed boyfriend, Salai, may have been the drawing's  model.) A poorly foreshortened -- and unfinished -- right arm is raised  to point toward heaven, a gesture that adds a funny homoerotic twist to  Leonardo's lascivious depiction.
Another erotic work, found on the verso of a foglio in the Atlantic Codex, depicts il Salaino's behind, towards which march several penises on two legs (Augusto Marinoni, in "Io Leonardo", Mondadori, Milano 1974, pp.288, 310). Some of Leonardo's other works on erotic topics, his drawings of heterosexual human sexual intercourse, were destroyed by a priest who found them after his death.
Salaì as Narcissus School of Leonardo
Portrait of Salai School of Leonardo 
Some people say that the Mona Lisa, is a disguised self-portrait of Leonardo. The Monna Lisa was bequeathed to Salaì by Leonardo. King François I bought the painting for 4,000 écus and kept it at Château Fontainebleau,
Nude Mona Lisa Attributed to Salai after  the lost original of Leonardo? This painting was supposed to originate  from Leonardo's workshop. Some experts claim that this picture was  painted after Leonardo's original 
Nude Mona Lisa Attributed to Salai after  the lost original of Leonardo? This painting was supposed to originate  from Leonardo's workshop. Some experts claim that this picture was  painted after Leonardo's original 
Nude Mona Lisa Attributed to Salai after  the lost original of Leonardo? This painting was supposed to originate  from Leonardo's workshop. Some experts claim that this picture was  painted after Leonardo's original 
This  naked portrait once belonged to Napoleon's uncle, Cardinal Joseph Fesch  (1763-1839) and was ensconced within the wood walls of Fesch's private  library for nearly a century, before trading more hands within the  Napoleon family. 
NUDE  GIOCONDA: There were more than 60 alleged Mona Lisas, as is known, and  here,a seminude portrait of "La Belle Gabrielle," which is currently in  the collection of Lord Spencerof Northamptonshire, England, and is  "attributed to the school of Da Vinci."
Monna Vanna Attributed to Salai about 1515 Cartoon, 72.4 x 54 cm Chantilly, Musee Conde
Copy of the Mona Lisa said to be by Salai shows how vibrant the Mona Lisa supposedly was at the time it was painted
Copy of the Mona Lisa School of Leonardo
 Vasari considered Salaì to be Leonardo’s most faithful  follower and he even went so far as to say that some of their works were  confused. Unlike the other Leonardeschi - such as Giovanni Antonio  Boltraffio, Marco d’Oggiono, Andrea Solario, Cesare da Sesto - Salaì did  not embark upon an independent artistic career but seemed content in  copying and interpreting his master’s works, thus disseminating  Leonardo’s inventions throughout the first quarter of the 16th century.  As Shell and Sironi have observed, ‘Salaì represents another kind of  Leonardesco; the faithful replicator of Leonardo’s models and, by his  own lights, executor of Leonardo’s intentions’.In 1516 Salaì went on a  journey once again with Melzi but this time to France, as part of  Leonardo’s household. Salaì continued to work for Leonardo until the  latter’s death and in his master’s will of April 23, 1519, Salaì is  named as joint heir to half of Leonardo’s vineyard, where Salaì built  his home and lived extremely comfortably (considering he was a painter  who had worked as a shop assistant for thirty years). In June 1523 Salaì  married Bianca Coldiroli d’Annono but six months later, on January 19,  1524, his life came to an abrupt end after a shooting. An inventory of  Salaì’s property and household goods drawn up on April 2, 1525, lists  numerous paintings including a Leda and ‘Joconda’ . The inventory of his possessions shows that he inherited many works by Leonardo, including the Mona Lisa and the Infant St John the Baptist (both Paris, Louvre). The high values assigned to some of the works would suggest that they were Leonardo’s originals
Gian Giacomo Caprotti Head of Christ, 1511
This  is the only singed painting by Gian Giacomo Caprotti "Salai". It sold  in New York city for $650,000. The head of Christ looks like the head of  Salai
The Virgin and Child with Saint. Peter and Paul; Gian Giacomo Caprotti
Madonna and Child with St Anne by Gian Giacomo Caprotti. Oil on board, 72x99 cm.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 


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