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Source Description
This drawing formed part of the painter Federico Barocci's painstaking working method, which began with studies from nature, included sculpted models in wax, and concluded with full-scale cartoons in color. A detailed figure study such as this would have followed numerous compositional and life studies in preparation for the final cartoon. The squares drawn over the figure indicate it was meant to be transferred to a larger format. Barocci may have made this drawing as a preparatory study for his large altarpiece depicting the <em>Martyrdom of St. Sebastian</em> intended for the Bonaventura Chapel in the Urbino cathedral. The legs of the putto were used in his final rendering of the Christ Child in that composition. The technique of using black and colored chalks reflects the introduction, in the 1560s, of colored chalks (called "pastelli") to Italy, knowledge of which likely spread from Venice down the Adriatic coast to Barocci's home in Urbino.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
144846
label
Cupid Drawing His Bow
core
obj
dtoType
drawing
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
144846
contentType
drawing
title
Cupid Drawing His Bow
description
This drawing formed part of the painter Federico Barocci's painstaking working method, which began with studies from nature, included sculpted models in wax, and concluded with full-scale cartoons in color. A detailed figure study such as this would have followed numerous compositional and life studies in preparation for the final cartoon. The squares drawn over the figure indicate it was meant to be transferred to a larger format. Barocci may have made this drawing as a preparatory study for his large altarpiece depicting the <em>Martyrdom of St. Sebastian</em> intended for the Bonaventura Chapel in the Urbino cathedral. The legs of the putto were used in his final rendering of the Christ Child in that composition. The technique of using black and colored chalks reflects the introduction, in the 1560s, of colored chalks (called "pastelli") to Italy, knowledge of which likely spread from Venice down the Adriatic coast to Barocci's home in Urbino.
date
c. 1560s
citation
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q79922351
creators
1180
genreSpecific
Drawing
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Sheet: 42.4 x 27.2 cm (16 11/16 x 10 11/16 in.)
cul
Italy, 16th century
accession
1969.7
Source extras
tec
black chalk with pastel (stumped in places), heightened with white chalk, squared with black chalk; framing lines in graphite
tombstone
Cupid Drawing His Bow, c. 1560s. Federico Barocci (Italian, 1528–1612). Black chalk with pastel (stumped in places), heightened with white chalk, squared with black chalk; framing lines in graphite; sheet: 42.4 x 27.2 cm (16 11/16 x 10 11/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Dudley P. Allen and Delia E. Holden Funds, 1969.70
supportMaterials
description
gray-green laid paper, laid down on cream(3) wove paper
collection
DR - Italian
inscriptions
inscription
lower left, in brown ink: [illegible]; verso, upper left, in graphite: 4 [circled]; upper center left, incised: adamid[i?] bl / hotel f[o?] / Chateau Front[as?]
didYouKnow
The grid of squares drawn over this figure was used by the artist or his workshop to transfer the composition to a larger format.
citations
citation
"Year in Review 1969." <em>Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art </em>57, no. 1 (January 1970).
page_number
Mentioned: p.48, under n. 155
citation
Neilson, Nancy Ward. <em>Italian Drawings Selected from Mid-Western Collections</em>. St. Louis, MO: The St. Louis Art Museum, 1972.
page_number
Mentioned: p. 31, under n. 8; Reproduced: p. 32
citation
Pillsbury, Edmund P., and Louise S. Richards. <em>The Graphic Art of Federico Barocci: Selected Drawings and Prints.</em> New Haven, CT: Yale University Art Gallery, 1978.
page_number
Mentioned: pp. 38-40, under n. 11; Reproduced: p. 39
citation
Olszewski, Edward J., and Jane Glaubinger. T<em>he Draftsman's Eye: Late Italian Renaissance Schools and Styles</em>. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1981.
page_number
Mentioned: pp. 17-18, 55, 60-61, under n. 33; Reproduced: p. 60, n. 33
citation
Miller, Michael. <em>Drawing: A Glossary of Materials: Selections from the Cleveland Museum of Art</em>. Cleveland, OH: The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1987.
page_number
Reproduced: p. 14
citation
McCullagh, Suzanne Folds. "Serendipity in a Solander Box: A Recently Discovered Pastel and Chalk Drawing by Federico Barocci." <em>Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies </em>17, no. 1 (1991): 52-65 + 93-94.
page_number
Mentioned: pp. 62 and 65
citation
DeGrazia, Diane and Carter E. Foster. <em>Master Drawings from the Cleveland Museum of Art.</em> Cleveland, OH: Cleveland Museum of Art in association with Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 2000.
page_number
Mentioned: pp. 38-39 and 284; Reproduced: p. 39, n. 9
citation
Emiliani, Andrea. <em>Federico Barocci (Urbino, 1535-1612)</em>, vol. 1. Ancona, Italy: Ars Books, 2008.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 114, n. 7.5
citation
Olszewski, Edward J., edited. <em>A Corpus of Drawings in Midwestern Collections: Sixteenth-Century Italian Drawings</em>, vol. 1. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepos Publishers, 2008.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 32, n. 28
citation
Baroni, Luca. "Getting to Color: Early Pastel Drawings by Federico Barocci," <em>Master Drawings</em> v 62 / n 2 (Summer 2024): 167-178.
page_number
171, 173, fig. 9
citation
Baroni, Luca. "Getting to Color: Early Pastel Drawings by Frederico Barocci." <em>Master Drawings </em>62, no. 2 (Summer 2024): 167-178.
page_number
Mentioned and reproduced: p. 171, 173, fig. 9
creditline
Dudley P. Allen and Delia E. Holden Funds
updatedAt
2026-05-29 07:26:33.032000
sourceId
144846
dept
Drawings
coll
DR - Italian
med
black chalk with pastel (stumped in places), heightened with white chalk, squared with black chalk; framing lines in graphite
creatorTags
male
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
f063aad3c7243887