Artigo Revisado por pares

Consumption and trade of art between Italy and England in the first half of the sixteenth century: the London house of the Bardi and Cavalcanti company

2002; Wiley; Volume: 16; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/1477-4658.00010

ISSN

1477-4658

Autores

Cinzia Maria Sicca,

Tópico(s)

Art History and Market Analysis

Resumo

Scattered passages in Vasari's Lives of the Artists testify to the trade of artworks outside Italy at the hands of the Florentine merchants. One such merchant‐venturer, Giovanni di Lorenzo Cavalcanti, is explicitly mentioned by Vasari in connection with commissions for Henry VIII. Documents found in private and public Italian archives shed light on Cavalcanti's activity, on the increasingly important role he came to play during the first half of the reign of Henry VIII. A strong Medici supporter, gentleman usher to Pope Leo X, Cavalcanti acted as a link between the Curia and the English monarchy, in a capacity which combined a semi‐diplomatic function with a thriving trading and banking activity in partnership with Pierfrancesco de' Bardi. In par‐ticular, the paper focuses on an analysis and discussion of the function of the firm's London house, as it can be evinced from a copia di masserizia (household inventory) drafted in 1523, when for six and a half months Gregorio da Casale (permanent English representative at the Curia) and Gabriello Cexano (Cardinal Giulio de Medici's secretary) lived in the house. The document affords an unprecedented insight into an early sixteenth‐century Italian household in London, its internal distribution, furnishings and works of art on display.

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