Column thumbnail 1
Column thumbnail 2
+3
images
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Medieval & Renaissance, Room 64, The Wolfson Gallery

Column

Column
ca. 1450-1475 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The decoration at the base combines the devices of two important Florentine families of the Renaissance: the ring with feathers of the Medici, and the poppy heads occasionally used by the Rucellai. Made for the support of a sculpture, the column may have been commissioned to celebrate a marriage between these two powerful families, perhaps that in 1466 of Bernardo Rucellai and Lorenzo de' Medici's sister Nannina. The column passed into the ownership of the Salviati family until the middle of the nineteenth century and was perhaps housed in the Villa Salviati at Ponte alla Badia (Florence).

The column was probably made by the workshop or circle of the sculptors Antonio Rossellino or Benedetto da Maiano.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleColumn (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Marble green and white
Brief description
Column, marble and verde antico, Florentine sculpture workshop, possibly of Antonio Rossellino or Benedetto da Maiano, (Italy) Florence, ca. 1450-1475
Physical description
The circular moulded base of the column rises from a pedestal with four concave sides which meet at squared-off corners. It is ornamented with four dolphin heads which rest on the corners of the pedestal beneath. Between each pair of dolphin heads is carved a Medici ring enclosing a feather flanked on either side by a poppy-head. Above is a wickerwork basket, from whose rim hang four clusters of poppy-heads, and at whose top is a circle of interlaced Medici rings with diamonds terminating in ball-shaped points. The verde antico shaft of the column is topped by a white marble capital carved with scrolls, leaves and flowers.
Dimensions
  • Height: 145.7cm
  • Diameter: 31cm (Note: This is the inner diameter, for the flat, rough area on the top of the column)
  • Diameter: 36.6cm (Note: Outer diameter. Total area of the top of the column.)
  • Width: 54cm (Note: Width at the base of the column)
  • Weight: 258 kg
Measured for Donatello touring exhibition 2022-2023 Weighed for the Donatello Exhibition (Palazzo Strozzi, Staatlisches Museen, V&A) 2022-2023
Gallery label
COLUMN White and green marble FLORENTINE; about 1450-1475 61-1882 Around the base appears the medici ring with feathers in conjunction with two poppy heads; both devices were used in the fifteenth century by the Rucellai family and there is a possibilitiy that the column was commissioned by Giovanni Rucellai (1403-81) or his son Bernardo (1448-1514), who married Lorenzo de Medici's sister Nannina, in 1446. The column passed into the ownership of the Salviati family until the middle of the nineteenth century and was perhaps housed in the Villa Salviati at Ponte alla Badia (Florence). The three dowel holes in the top of the column indicate that it was designed to support a sculpture.(1995)
Object history
Purchased by J.C. Robinson in Florence (vendor not recorded) in 1882. A letter from Robinson printed in The Times 24 October 1883, states that the column was brought from a Villa of the Salviati family in the neighbourhood of Florence "Still in their possesion". It is possible that the villa referred to by Robinson was the Villa Salviati at Ponte alla Badia, which passed out of the heirs of the Salviati family in 1844 but has continued to be known as the Villa Salviati.
Historical context
Maclagan and Longhurst identify the emblems on the base as "a combination of the 'Medici ring' and the poppy-head emblems of Bartolini-Salimbeni family", on the analogy of a terracotta roundel formerly at Diacomano, now in the Bargello, which bears the Medici device of three feathers issuing from a diamond ring with the motto SEMPER in combination with the Bartolini -Salimbeni device of three poppy-heads issuing from a diamond ring with the motto PER NON DORMIRE. The roundel is associated by Marquand with the marriage of Bartolomeo di Andrea de' Medici and Alessandra di Leonardo Bartolini-Salimbeni. The Bartolini-Salimbeni emblem shown on the roundel appears on the palace built in 1517-1520 for Giovanni Bartolini (1472-1544), but differs from that on the pedestal where two poppy-heads and a central feather are shown. The Medici ring with feathers appears on the Palazzo Rucellai , which was built by Giovanni Rucellai (1403-81), and poppy-heads were among the devices used by this family. There is thus a possibility that the pedestal was commissioned by Giovanni Rucellai or by his son Bernardo (1448-1514), whose marriage to Nannina, sister of Lorenzo de' Medici, took place in 1466. The form of the basket and the dolphins on the base would be consistent with a dating circa 1470-5.

Marble pillaged from antique sites became a ‘primary resource’ in the area around Rome, and formed the basis of medieval Rome’s only real industry. With a little adaptation, column shafts and to some extent bases and capitals could be used to give new buildings and ornaments a substantial claim to antiquity. The prized stones could also be sawn up for use as panels for screens, parts of liturgical furnishing and as architectural cladding. Columns made of porphyry and verde antico were sawn into slices to be used as coloured stone disks (rotae) that served as a starting point for ornamental floor patterns.
Subjects depicted
Summary
The decoration at the base combines the devices of two important Florentine families of the Renaissance: the ring with feathers of the Medici, and the poppy heads occasionally used by the Rucellai. Made for the support of a sculpture, the column may have been commissioned to celebrate a marriage between these two powerful families, perhaps that in 1466 of Bernardo Rucellai and Lorenzo de' Medici's sister Nannina. The column passed into the ownership of the Salviati family until the middle of the nineteenth century and was perhaps housed in the Villa Salviati at Ponte alla Badia (Florence).

The column was probably made by the workshop or circle of the sculptors Antonio Rossellino or Benedetto da Maiano.
Bibliographic references
  • Motture, Peta, ed., Donatello: Sculpting the Renaissance, London: V&A Publishing, 2023. p. 192, cat. 3.8, entry by Amy R. Bloch, Attribution: Florentine sculpture workshop, possibly of Antonio Rossellino or Benedetto da Maiano
  • Rowley, Neville, ed., Donatello: Inventor of the Renaissance, Berlin: Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, 2022. pp. 216-217, cat. 43, entry by Francesco Caglioti, Attribution: Florentine sculpture workshop (Antonio Rossellino or Benedetto da Maiano?)
  • Caglioti, Francesco, ed., with Laura Cavazzini, Aldo Galli, and Neville Rowley. Donatello: il Rinascimento, Venice: Marsilio, 2022. pp. 206-207, cat. 5.7, entry by Francesco Caglioti, Attribution: Florentine sculpture workshop (Antonio Rossellino o Benedetto da Maiano?)
  • Sperling, Christine M. 'Donatello's Bronze David and the demands of Medici politics'. The Burlington Magazine. April 1992. CXXXIV, no. 1069, pp. 218-224.
  • Scalini, Mario. L'Arte Italiana del Bronzo, 100-1700 Milan, 1988, pp. 74-5.
  • Pope-Hennessy, John, assisted by Lightbown, Ronald, Catalogue of Italian Sculpture in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London: HMSO 1964 (3 volumes), vol. 1, p. 200, cat. 182.
  • Maclagan and Longhurst Catalogue of Italian Sculpture, London, 1932, p. 21.
  • Marquand, Allan, Giovanni della Robbia, Princeton: 1920, pp. 110-1.
  • List of Objects in the Art Division, South Kensington Museum acquired during the Year 1882. London: 1883, p. 6
  • Passerini, Luigi, Genealogia e storia della famiglia Rucellai, Florence, 1861.
Collection
Accession number
61-1882

About this object record

Explore the Collections contains over a million catalogue records, and over half a million images. It is a working database that includes information compiled over the life of the museum. Some of our records may contain offensive and discriminatory language, or reflect outdated ideas, practice and analysis. We are committed to addressing these issues, and to review and update our records accordingly.

You can write to us to suggest improvements to the record.

Suggest feedback

Record createdFebruary 17, 2004
Record URL
Download as: JSONIIIF Manifest