Cantoria thumbnail 1
On display

Cantoria

1433-1456 (sculpted), ca. 1877 (cast)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Plaster cast of a cantoria after marble original by Donatello in the Museo dell' Opera del Duomo, Florence.

Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Plaster cast
Brief description
Plaster cast cantoria after marble original by Donatello, cast by Oronzio Lelli, about 1877
Physical description
Plaster cast of a cantoria after marble original by Donatello in the Museo dell' Opera del Duomo, Florence.
Dimensions
  • Height: 328cm
  • Depth: 129.5cm
  • Length: 574.5cm
Object history
Purchased from Oronzio Lelli, Florence in 1877 for £195 12s
Historical context
The Cantoria, or Singing Gallery, was probably designed as an organ loft, and may have acquired its name when, in 1688, the balustrade was replaced by a larger wooden structure to hold a choir to sing at Ferdinando de'Medici's wedding. The lower part remained in place until 1841/2, when a new organ loft was installed. The upper frieze was not reunited with the lower part until 1870, when all known fragments of the Cantoria were exhibited in the Museo Nazionale. The columns remained unrecognised in the courtyard of the Opera del Duomo. It was not until the recognition of these columns, and the discovery of a small part of the original cornice, that a reconstruction was effected by Luigi del Moro, after 1883. The acquisition of the Victoria and Albert Museum's cast in two parts (lower part and frieze 1877, upper cornice and columns 1894) and its reconstruction after del Moro's design reflects the stages of research in Florence. There are still discrepancies between the present cast and the original appearance of the Cantoria. The blank tondi of the lowest register once contained two bronze heads by Donatello, documented in 1436, 1439 and 1456. These have tentatively been identified as two heads in the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo. There is uncertainty in the relationship of the columns to the frieze, and in the exact ornamentation of the top cornice, as it was reconstructed from only a small fragment.
Collection
Accession number
REPRO.1877-44

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Record createdDecember 7, 1999
Record URL
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