La Bella Principessa
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''La Bella Principessa'' (English: "The Beautiful Princess"), also known as Portrait of Bianca Sforza, ''Young Girl in Profile in Renaissance Dress'' and ''Portrait of a Young Fiancée'', is a portrait in coloured chalks and ink, on
vellum Vellum is prepared animal skin or membrane, typically used as writing material. Parchment is another term for this material, from which vellum is sometimes distinguished, when it is made from calfskin, as opposed to that made from other anima ...
, of a young lady in fashionable costume and hairstyle of a
Milan Milan ( , , Lombard: ; it, Milano ) is a city in northern Italy, capital of Lombardy, and the second-most populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of about 1.4 million, while its metropolitan city h ...
ese of the 1490s. Some scholars have attributed it to
Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, Drawing, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially res ...
but the attribution and the work's authenticity have been disputed. Some of those who disagree with the attribution to Leonardo believe the portrait is by an early 19th-century German artist imitating the style of the
Italian Renaissance The Italian Renaissance ( it, Rinascimento ) was a period in Italian history covering the 15th and 16th centuries. The period is known for the initial development of the broader Renaissance culture that spread across Europe and marked the trans ...
, although radiocarbon dating tests show a much earlier date for the vellum. It has also been denounced as a forgery. The white lead has been dated to be at least 225 years old. The work sold for just under $22,000 at
auction An auction is usually a process of buying and selling goods or services by offering them up for bids, taking bids, and then selling the item to the highest bidder or buying the item from the lowest bidder. Some exceptions to this definition ex ...
in 1998, and was bought by its current owner Peter Silverman in 2007. He has championed the attribution to Leonardo, supported by the analysis of academics
Martin Kemp Martin John Kemp (born 10 October 1961) is an English musician and actor, best known as the bassist in the new wave band Spandau Ballet and for his role as Steve Owen in ''EastEnders''. He is the younger brother of Gary Kemp, who is also ...
and Pascal Cotte. The drawing was shown as a Leonardo in an exhibition in Sweden in 2010 and was estimated by various newspaper reports to be worth more than $160 million. The ''Bella Principessa'' remains locked in a vault in a secret Swiss location. According to Kemp and Cotte, the sheet was cut from a Milanese vellum book, ''La Sforziada'', in
Warsaw Warsaw ( pl, Warszawa, ), officially the Capital City of Warsaw,, abbreviation: ''m.st. Warszawa'' is the capital and largest city of Poland. The metropolis stands on the River Vistula in east-central Poland, and its population is officia ...
, which celebrates the marriage in 1496 of Galeazzo Sanseverino with Bianca, the illegitimate daughter of Ludovico Sforza, Leonardo's employer. It has subsequently been exhibited in Urbino, Monza and Nanjing; and a facsimile edition of the portrait and the book in Warsaw has been published.


Description

The portrait is a
mixed media In visual art, mixed media describes artwork in which more than one medium or material has been employed. Assemblages, collages, and sculpture are three common examples of art using different media. Materials used to create mixed media art incl ...
drawing in pen and brown ink with red, black and white chalk, on vellum, which has been laid down on an oak board. There are signs of restoration with thin paint applied with a brush. Three stitch holes in the left-hand margin of the vellum, indicate that the leaf was once in a bound volume. It represents a girl in her early teens, depicted in profile, the usual way in which Italian artists of the 15th century portraited women. The girl's dress and hairstyle indicate that she was a member of the Court of Milan during the 1490s. If it truly is a Renaissance work, it would have been executed in the 1490s according to Kemp and Cotte. If the subject is Bianca Sforza it would date from 1496, the year of her marriage and her death. Reflecting the subject of an Italian woman of high nobility, Kemp named the portrait ''La Bella Principessa'', although acknowledging that Sforza ladies were not
princess Princess is a regal rank and the feminine equivalent of prince (from Latin '' princeps'', meaning principal citizen). Most often, the term has been used for the consort of a prince, or for the daughter of a king or prince. Princess as a subs ...
es.


Provenance

If the drawing is originally a Leonardo illustration for the present-day Warsaw copy of the ''Sforziad'', its history is the same as that of the book until the drawing was cut out from the volume. The book is known to have been rebound at the turn of the 18th and 19th century. The modern provenance of the drawing is known only from 1955 and is documented only from 1998. According to a lawsuit brought by Jeanne Marchig against Christie's after the drawing's re-attribution to Leonardo, the drawing belonged to her husband Giannino Marchig, an art restorer, when they married in 1955. Jeanne Marchig became the owner of the drawing in 1983, following her husband's death. The work was included in a sale at Christie's in New York on January 30, 1998, catalogued as ''Young Girl in Profile in Renaissance Dress'', and described as "German School, early 19th Century". The seller was Jeanne Marchig. It was sold for $21,850 (including buyer's premium) to a New York art dealer who sold it on for a similar amount in 2007. In 2007, art dealer Peter Silverman, purchased the portrait from a gallery on East 73rd Street, owned by Kate Ganz. Peter Silverman believed that the portrait was possibly from an older period, potentially dating back to the Renaissance period, and sought the opinions of experts who have since attributed it to
Leonardo da Vinci Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, Drawing, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially res ...
. In 2010 one of those experts,
Martin Kemp Martin John Kemp (born 10 October 1961) is an English musician and actor, best known as the bassist in the new wave band Spandau Ballet and for his role as Steve Owen in ''EastEnders''. He is the younger brother of Gary Kemp, who is also ...
, made it the subject of his book co-authored with Pascal Cotte, ''La Bella Principessa: The Story of the New Masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci''. This is now revised in Kemp and Cotte's ''La Bella Principessa di Leonardo da Vinci. Ritratto di Bianca Sforza'', Florence, 2012. The drawing was shown as a Leonardo in a 2010 exhibition called ''And there was Light'' in
Eriksberg, Gothenburg Eriksberg is an area on Hisingen in Gothenburg where Eriksbergs Mekaniska Verkstads AB had their shipyard until bankruptcy in 1979. For over a century the area was dominated by shipbuilding but a crisis in the 1970s destroyed the industry. Since ...
, in Sweden, and was estimated by various newspaper reports to be worth more than $160 million. Silverman promoted the Leonardo connection in his 2012 book ''Leonardo's Lost Princess: One Man's Quest to Authenticate an Unknown Portrait by Leonardo da Vinci'' and has declined an offer for the portrait of $80 million.


The fingerprint dispute

Pascal Cotte of Lumière Technology in Paris performed a multi-spectral digital scan of the work. The high resolution images were used by Peter Paul Biro, a
forensic Forensic science, also known as criminalistics, is the application of science to criminal and civil laws, mainly—on the criminal side—during criminal investigation, as governed by the legal standards of admissible evidence and criminal p ...
art examiner who studied a
fingerprint A fingerprint is an impression left by the friction ridges of a human finger. The recovery of partial fingerprints from a crime scene is an important method of forensic science. Moisture and grease on a finger result in fingerprints on surfac ...
on the vellum which he said was "highly comparable" to a fingerprint on Leonardo's unfinished '' St. Jerome in the Wilderness''. In 2010 David Grann published an article about the drawing in ''The New Yorker'', which implied that Biro had been involved with forged paintings attributed to Jackson Pollock. Biro consequently sued the writer and the publisher of the New Yorker Advance Media for defamation in 2011. The judge in the case, J. Paul Oetken, ruled that the article contained eight instances that were capable of a defamatory meaning. He eventually dismissed the case on a technicality arguing that Biro was a limited purpose public figure. An appeals court supported the initial judgment. The New Yorker article was republished in 2018 and Biro sued the New Yorker again for republication of a potentially defamatory article. The case is before the court and a ruling is expected. Biro is an analyst and not an "authenticator". He continues to practice art analytics as he has for the past 40 years. The fingerprint evidence is not cited in the revised Italian edition of the book by Kemp and Cotte or in any of Kemp’s subsequent publications. The story of the research and attribution is told in Kemp's ''Living with Leonardo''.David Grann, ‘The Mark of a Masterpiece’, ''The New Yorker'', July 12, 2010. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/07/12/the-mark-of-a-masterpiece


Support for Leonardo attribution

The first study of the drawing was published by Cristina Geddo. Geddo attributes this work to Leonardo based not only on stylistic considerations, extremely high quality and left-handed
hatching Hatching (french: hachure) is an artistic technique used to create tonal or shading Shading refers to the depiction of depth perception in 3D models (within the field of 3D computer graphics) or illustrations (in visual art) by varying ...
, but also on the evidence of the combination of black, white and red chalks (the ''
trois crayons ''Trois crayons'' (; en, "three chalks") is a drawing technique using three colors of chalk: red (''sanguine''), black, and white. The paper used may be a mid-tone such as grey, blue, or tan. Among numerous others, French painters Antoine Watteau ...
'' technique). Leonardo was the first artist in Italy to use pastels, a drawing technique he had learned from the French artist
Jean Perréal Jean Perréal (-) -- sometimes called Peréal, Johannes Parisienus or Jean De Paris -- was a successful portraitist for French Royalty in the first half of the 16th century, as well as an architect, sculptor and limner of illuminated manuscripts ...
, whom he met in Milan in 1494 and/ or 1499. Leonardo acknowledges his debt to Perréal in the
Codex Atlanticus The Codex Atlanticus (Atlantic Codex) is a 12-volume, bound set of drawings and writings (in Italian) by Leonardo da Vinci, the largest single set. Its name indicates the large paper used to preserve original Leonardo notebook pages, which was us ...
. Geddo also points out that the "coazzone" of the sitter's hairstyle was fashionable during the same period. Strong support for the attribution has come from Elizabetta Gnignera, the costume historian, in her book ''La Bella Svelata'', which studies a wide range of comparative costumes and hair styles.


Expert opinions

A number of Leonardo experts and art historians have concurred with the attribution to Leonardo, including: * Martin Kemp, Emeritus Research Professor in the History of Art at the
University of Oxford , mottoeng = The Lord is my light , established = , endowment = £6.1 billion (including colleges) (2019) , budget = £2.145 billion (2019–20) , chancellor ...
, *
Carlo Pedretti Carlo Pedretti (6 January 1928 – 5 January 2018) was an Italian historian. In his lifetime, he was considered one of the world's leading experts on the life and works of Leonardo da Vinci. He was a professor of art history and Armand Hammer Ch ...
, late professor emeritus of art history and Armand Hammer Chair in Leonardo Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles * Nicholas Turner, former curator at the British Museum and the J. Paul Getty Museum * Alessandro Vezzosi, the director of the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci in Vinci, ItalyAlessandro Vezzosi, ''Nuptial Portrait of a Young Woman'' * Cristina Geddo, an expert on Milanese Leonardesques and
Giampietrino Giampietrino, probably Giovanni Pietro Rizzoli (active 1495–1549), was a north Italian painter of the Lombard school and Leonardo's circle, succinctly characterized by S. J. Freedberg as an "exploiter of Leonardo's repertory."Freedberg, 1993 ...
, * Mina Gregori,
professor emerita ''Emeritus'' (; female: ''emerita'') is an adjective used to designate a retired chair, professor, pastor, bishop, pope, director, president, prime minister, rabbi, emperor, or other person who has been "permitted to retain as an honorary title ...
at the
University of Florence The University of Florence (Italian: ''Università degli Studi di Firenze'', UniFI) is an Italian public research university located in Florence, Italy. It comprises 12 schools and has around 50,000 students enrolled. History The first universi ...
.Esterow, Milton
"The Real Thing?"
in ''
ARTnews ''ARTnews'' is an American visual-arts magazine, based in New York City. It covers art from ancient to contemporary times. ARTnews is the oldest and most widely distributed art magazine in the world. It has a readership of 180,000 in 124 countr ...
''


Analysis

In 2010, after a two-year study of the picture, Kemp published his findings and conclusions in a book, ''La Bella Principessa: The Story of the New Masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci''. Kemp describes the work as "a portrait of a young lady on the cusp of maturity
hich Ij ( fa, ايج, also Romanized as Īj; also known as Hich and Īch) is a village in Golabar Rural District, in the Central District of Ijrud County, Zanjan Province, Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran, and also ...
shows her with the fashionable costume and hairstyle of a Milanese court lady in the 1490s". By process of elimination involving the inner group of young
Sforza The House of Sforza () was a ruling family of Renaissance Italy, based in Milan. They acquired the Duchy of Milan following the extinction of the Visconti family in the mid-15th century, Sforza rule ending in Milan with the death of the last me ...
women, Kemp suggested that she is probably Bianca Sforza, the illegitimate (but later legitimized) daughter of Ludovico Sforza ("Il Moro"), duke of Milan. In 1496, when Bianca was no more than 14, she married Galeazzo Sanseverino, captain of the duke's Milanese forces and a patron of Leonardo. Bianca was dead within months of her marriage, having suffered from a stomach complaint (possibly an ectopic pregnancy). Kemp pointed out that Milanese ladies were often the dedicatees of volumes of poetry on
vellum Vellum is prepared animal skin or membrane, typically used as writing material. Parchment is another term for this material, from which vellum is sometimes distinguished, when it is made from calfskin, as opposed to that made from other anima ...
, and that such a portrait of a "beloved lady" would have made a suitable
title page The title page of a book, thesis or other written work is the page at or near the front which displays its title, subtitle, author, publisher, and edition, often artistically decorated. (A half title, by contrast, displays only the title of a w ...
or main illustration for a set of verses produced on the occasion of her marriage or death. The physical and scientific evidence from multispectral analysis and study of the painting, as described by Kemp in the first edition of his book with Cotte, may be summarized as follows: * The technique of the portrait is black, red and white chalks (''
trois crayons ''Trois crayons'' (; en, "three chalks") is a drawing technique using three colors of chalk: red (''sanguine''), black, and white. The paper used may be a mid-tone such as grey, blue, or tan. Among numerous others, French painters Antoine Watteau ...
'', a French medium), with pen and ink. * The drawing and
hatching Hatching (french: hachure) is an artistic technique used to create tonal or shading Shading refers to the depiction of depth perception in 3D models (within the field of 3D computer graphics) or illustrations (in visual art) by varying ...
was carried out entirely by a left-handed artist, as Leonardo is known to have been, although restorations are by a right-hander. * There are significant
pentimenti A pentimento (plural pentimenti), in painting, is "the presence or emergence of earlier images, forms, or strokes that have been changed and painted over". The word is , from the verb , meaning 'to repent'. Significance Pentimenti may show that ...
. * The portrait is characterized by particularly subtle details, such as the
relief Relief is a sculptural method in which the sculpted pieces are bonded to a solid background of the same material. The term '' relief'' is from the Latin verb ''relevo'', to raise. To create a sculpture in relief is to give the impression that th ...
of the ear hinted at below the hair, and the amber of the sitter's iris. * There are strong stylistic parallels with the
Windsor Windsor may refer to: Places Australia * Windsor, New South Wales ** Municipality of Windsor, a former local government area * Windsor, Queensland, a suburb of Brisbane, Queensland **Shire of Windsor, a former local government authority around Wi ...
silverpoint Silverpoint (one of several types of metalpoint) is a traditional drawing technique first used by medieval scribes on manuscripts. History A silverpoint drawing is made by dragging a silver rod or wire across a surface, often prepared with gesso ...
drawing of ''A Woman in Profile'', which, like other head studies by Leonardo, features comparable delicate pentimenti to the profile. * The members of the Sforza family were always portrayed in profile, whereas Ludovico's mistresses were not. * The proportions of the head and face reflect the rules that Leonardo articulated in his notebooks. * The interlace or knotwork ornament in the costume and
caul A caul or cowl ( la, Caput galeatum, literally, "helmeted head") is a piece of membrane that can cover a newborn's head and face. Birth with a caul is rare, occurring in fewer than 1 in 80,000 births. The caul is harmless and is immediately remov ...
corresponds to patterns that Leonardo explored in other works and in the logo designs for his ''Academy''. * The portrait was executed on vellum—used by him in his illustrations for Luca Pacioli's De divina proportione (1498). We know from his writings that he was interested in the French technique of dry colouring on parchment (vellum). He specifically noted that he should ask the French artist, Jean Perréal, who was in Milan in 1494 and perhaps on other occasions, about the method of colouring in dry chalks. * The format of the vellum support is that of a rectangle, a format used for several of his portraits. * The vellum sheet was cut from a codex, probably a volume of poetry of the kind presented to mark major events in the Sforza women's lives. * The vellum includes a palmprint in the chalk pigment on the neck of the sitter, which is characteristic of Leonardo's technique. * The green of the sitter's costume was obtained with a simple diffusion of black chalk applied on top of the yellowish tone of the vellum support. (Kemp has subsequently expressed reservations about this evidence.) * The nuances of the flesh tints were also achieved by exploiting the tone of the vellum and allowing it to show through the transparent media. * There are noteworthy similarities between this work and the portrait of Cecilia Gallerani, including the handling of the eyes, the modelling of flesh tones using the palm of the hand, the intricacy of the patterns of the knotwork ornament and the treatment of the contours. * The now somewhat pale original hatching in pen and ink was retouched in ink in a later restoration, which is far less fluid, precise and rhythmic. * There have been some re-touchings over the years, most extensively in the costume and headdress, but the restoration has not affected the expression and physiognomy of the face to a significant degree, and has not seriously affected the overall impact of the portrait.


Warsaw copy of the ''Sforziada''

In 2011, after the publication of the first edition of their book, Kemp and Pascal Cotte reported that there was evidence that the drawing had once been part of a copy in the
National Library of Poland The National Library ( pl, Biblioteka Narodowa) is the central Polish library, subject directly to the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage of the Republic of Poland. The library collects books, journals, electronic and audiovisual publicat ...
in
Warsaw Warsaw ( pl, Warszawa, ), officially the Capital City of Warsaw,, abbreviation: ''m.st. Warszawa'' is the capital and largest city of Poland. The metropolis stands on the River Vistula in east-central Poland, and its population is officia ...
of the ''Sforziada''. This is a printed book with hand-illuminated additions containing a long propagandistic poem in praise of the father of Ludovico Sforza, who was Leonardo's patron, recounting the career. The Warsaw copy, printed on vellum with added illumination, was given to Galeazzo Sanseverino, a military commander under Ludovico Sforza, on his marriage to Bianca Sforza in 1496. Kemp and Cotte identified where two sheets were missing from this volume from which they believe the drawing was cut. Kemp and Cotte say that, although "the dimensions and precise locations of the holes in the portrait cannot be obtained with precision", the three holes on the left-hand side of the drawing can be aligned with three of the five stitch holes in the sheets in the book. According to Kemp and Cotte, the association with the ''Sforziada'' suggests that the drawing is a portrait of Bianca Sforza, who was the daughter of Ludovico Sforza and his mistress Bernardina de Corradis. At the time of the portrait, she was around thirteen years old. Leonardo painted three other portraits associated with the family or court of Ludovico Sforza. The Polish scholar Bogdan Horodyski in 1954-1956 reached the conclusion that the Warsaw illumination refers to both the deceased dukes Galeazzo Maria and Gian Galeazzo and to the dynastic downfall after the usurpation of Ludovico il Moro. The reproduction of the unpublished heraldic figure attributed to Antonio Grifo, illuminated in the incunabulum "Comedia" by Dante (Cremonese, Venice 1491), now at Casa di Dante in Rome, shows the original coat of arms and insignia of the family of Galeazzo Sanseverino, and the comparison with those illuminated by Birago is not corresponding. Developing this hypothesis, Carla Glori suggests that Caterina Sforza, the daughter of Galeazzo Maria and half-sister of Gian Galeazzo, was the owner of the Warsaw Sforziad and that she gave it to the family of her deceased half-brother between 1496-1499. Horodyski’s ideas have recently been revived by Katarzyna Krzyzagórska-Pisarek in her “''La Bella Principessa''. Arguments against the Attribution to Leonardo”, ''Artibus et Historiae'', XXXVI, 215, pp. 61– 89. Pisarek is a member of Artwatch UK, which has offered polemic denunciations of Kemp.


Opposition to Leonardo attribution

The ''New Yorker'' article discussed the troubling circumstances in which Kemp attributed this work to Leonardo. But apart from this, strong indications are going against the hypothesis of authenticity, and the attribution to Leonardo has been challenged by a number of scholars who showed interest. Among the reasons for doubting its authorship are the lack of provenance prior to the 20th century – unusual given Leonardo's renown dating from his own lifetime, as well as the fame of the purported subject's family – and the fact that it was on vellum. Only once did Leonardo use vellum and old sheets of it are easily acquired by forgers. Leonardo scholar Pietro C. Marani discounts the significance of the drawing being made by a left-handed artist, noting that imitators of Leonardo's work have emulated this characteristic in the past. Marani is also troubled by use of vellum, "monotonous" detail, use of colored pigments in specific areas, firmness of touch and lack of craquelure. A museum director who wished to remain anonymous believes the drawing is "a screaming 20th-century fake", and finds the damages and repair to the drawing suspicious. The work was not requested for inclusion in the 2011–12 exhibition at the
National Gallery The National Gallery is an art museum in Trafalgar Square in the City of Westminster, in Central London, England. Founded in 1824, it houses a collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900. The current Director ...
in London, which specifically covered Leonardo's period in Milan;
Nicholas Penny Sir Nicholas Beaver Penny (born 21 December 1949) is a British art historian. From 2008 to 2015 he was director of the National Gallery in London. Early life Penny was educated at Shrewsbury School before he studied English at St Catharine ...
, director of the
National Gallery The National Gallery is an art museum in Trafalgar Square in the City of Westminster, in Central London, England. Founded in 1824, it houses a collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900. The current Director ...
, said simply "We have not asked to borrow it." Carlo Pedretti, one of the scholars who attribute this work to Leonardo, had before made a mistake attributing a painting from the twentieth century to the Master. Klaus Albrecht Schröder, director of the Albertina, Vienna, said "No one is convinced it is a Leonardo," and David Ekserdjian, a scholar of 16th-century Italian drawings, wrote that he suspects the work is a "counterfeit". Neither Carmen Bambach of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 ...
, one of the primary scholars of Leonardo's drawings, nor Everett Fahy, her colleague at the Metropolitan, accepts the attribution to Leonardo. Several forensic experts on fingerprints have discounted Biro's conclusions, finding the partial fingerprint taken from the drawing too poorly detailed to offer conclusive evidence. Biro's description of the print as being "highly comparable" to a known fingerprint of Leonardo's has similarly been discounted by fingerprint examiners as being too vague an assessment to establish authorship. When asked if he may have been mistaken to suggest that the fingerprint was Leonardo's, Biro answered "It's possible. Yes." Kemp’s later publications do not use the finger-print evidence in support of the attribution. Noting the lack of mention of dissenting opinion in Kemp's publication, Richard Dorment, the former husband of Ganz, wrote in the ''
Telegraph Telegraphy is the long-distance transmission of messages where the sender uses symbolic codes, known to the recipient, rather than a physical exchange of an object bearing the message. Thus flag semaphore is a method of telegraphy, whereas p ...
'': "Although purporting to be a work of scholarship, his book has none of the balanced analysis you would expect from such an acclaimed historian. For ''La Bella Principessa'', as he called the girl in the study, is not art history – it is advocacy." Fred R. Kline, an independent art historian and author of ''Leonardo's Holy Child--The Discovery of a Leonardo da Vinci Masterpiece: A Connoisseur's Search for Lost Art in America'', is known for his discovery of “Leonardo's model drawing” of Infant Jesus (which has yet to be accepted by Leonardo scholars) and for a number of important discoveries of
lost art Lost artworks are original pieces of art that credible sources indicate once existed but that cannot be accounted for in museums or private collections or are known to have been destroyed deliberately or accidentally, or neglected through igno ...
by the Nazarene Brotherhood, a group of German painters working in Rome during the early 19th century who revived the styles and subjects of the Italian Renaissance. Kline has proposed one of the Nazarenes, Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (1794–1872), as the creator of the drawing. In evidence, Kline points to a drawing on vellum by Schnorr, ''Half-nude Female'', in the collection of the
Kunsthalle Mannheim The Kunsthalle Mannheim is a museum of modern and contemporary art, built in 1907, established in 1909 and located in Mannheim, Germany. Since then it has housed the city's art collections as well as temporary exhibitions – and up to 1927 those ...
in Germany, which he suggests depicts the same model, although older, as portrayed in ''La Bella Principessa.'' Comparative material-testing of the vellum supports of the Mannheim Schnorr and ''La Bella Principessa'' were anticipated to occur in the New York federal court lawsuit ''Marchig v. Christie's'', brought in May 2010 by the original owner of ''La Bella Principessa'', who accused Christie's of
breach of fiduciary duty A fiduciary is a person who holds a legal or ethical relationship of trust with one or more other parties (person or group of persons). Typically, a fiduciary prudently takes care of money or other assets for another person. One party, for examp ...
, negligent misrepresentation and other claims. However, the court dismissed the suit on the ground that the claims were brought years too late (
Statute of Limitations A statute of limitations, known in civil law systems as a prescriptive period, is a law passed by a legislative body to set the maximum time after an event within which legal proceedings may be initiated. ("Time for commencing proceedings") In ...
and Laches), and thus the merits of the suit were never addressed. The district court decision was upheld on appeal. Disagreements with the attribution to Leonardo were made before the discovery of the missing page in the Warsaw Sforziada book. No alternative attribution has been accepted by Kemp or his research group. Kline claims that no comparative scientific analysis has been made of the vellum supports in question: the Warsaw Sforziada book, the Mannheim Schnorr (an alternate attribution), and ''La Bella Principessa,'' although Kemp and Cotte have shown a close match between the vellum of the portrait and the book. Further analysis of the vellum could possibly provide the conclusive evidence that may support or disqualify Schnorr's authorship. In November 2015, notorious art forger
Shaun Greenhalgh Shaun Greenhalgh (born 1961) is a British artist and former art forger. Over a seventeen-year period, between 1989 and 2006, he produced a large number of forgeries. With the assistance of his brother and elderly parents, who fronted the sal ...
claimed that he created the work in 1978, at the age of 20; Greenhalgh said the woman's face is that of a supermarket check-out girl named Sally who worked in Bolton, outside
Manchester Manchester () is a city in Greater Manchester, England. It had a population of 552,000 in 2021. It is bordered by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east, and the neighbouring city of Salford to the west. The t ...
. In his memoir ''A Forger's Tale'', written in prison, Greenhalgh claims as a 17 year old to have forged the drawing by obtaining an old piece of vellum from a reused 1587 land deed. Kemp said he found the claim hilarious and ridiculous.


Popular culture

The work of art was studied on the PBS program ''NOVA'' in 2012 in a program titled ''Mystery of a Masterpiece'', from NOVA/National Geographic/PBS, which aired on January 25, 2012.


Notes


References


Bibliography

* Centro di Conservazione e Restauro (2014). ''La Bella Principessa. Dossier tecnico di consegna''. Turin: Centro di Conservazione e Restauro, Venaria Reale. * Geddo, Cristina. "Il pastello ritrovato: un nuovo ritratto di Leonardo?", ''Artes'', 14, 2008-9: 63–8

(with French abstract and the English version "The “Pastel” found: a new Portrait by Leonardo da Vinci?

. * Geddo, Cristina, ''Leonardo da Vinci: la découverte extraordinaire du dernier portrait. Les pourquoi d’une authentification. Conférence'', Société genevoise d’études italiennes, Genève, Palais de l’Athénée, Salle des Abeilles, 2 octobre 2012, Paris-Genève, Lumière-Technology, 201

(with the English version ''Leonardo da Vinci: the extraordinary discovery of the last portrait. The rationale for authentication. A Lecture'

. * Gnignera, Elisabetta ''La Bella Svelata'', Bologna, 2016. * Kemp, Martin (2015). ''Bianca and the Book: The Sforziada and Leonardo's Portrait of Bianca Sforza''. Bologna: Scripta Maneant. . * Kemp, Martin, with Pascal Cotte and Peter Paul Biro (2010). ''La Bella Principessa: The Story of the New Masterpiece by Leonardo da Vinci''. London: Hodder & Stoughton. * Kemp, Martin and Pascal Cotte (2012). ''La Bella Principessa di Leonardo da Vinci. Ritratto di Bianca Sforza'', Florence; Mandragora. * Kemp, Martin, with Mina Gregori, Cristina Geddo et alii (2015). ''La Bella Principessa di Leonardo da Vinci: ritratto di Bianca Sforza'', Introduction by Vittorio Sgarbi (Monza, Villa Reale), exhibition catalogue, Reggio Emilia, Scripta Maneant (with English, French, Spanish, Polish, Russian and Japanese versions) * Kline, Fred R. (2016). ''Leonardo's Holy Child: The Discovery of a Leonardo da Vinci Masterpiece—A Connoisseur's Search for Lost Art in America''. New York & London: Pegasus Books. * O'Neill, Tom; Colla, Gianluca
Lady with a Secret: A Chalk-And-Ink Portrait May Be a $100 Million Leonardo
''
National Geographic Magazine ''National Geographic'' (formerly the ''National Geographic Magazine'', sometimes branded as NAT GEO) is a popular American monthly magazine published by National Geographic Partners. Known for its photojournalism, it is one of the most widely ...
'', February 2012. * Ragai, Jehane (2015). ''The Scientist and the Forger: Insights into the Scientific Detection of Forgery in Paintings''. London: Imperial College Press. * Silverman, Peter (2012). ''Leonardo's Lost Princess: One Man's Quest to Authenticate an Unknown Portrait by Leonardo da Vinci''. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. * Vezzosi, Alessandro. ''Nuptial Portrait of a Young Woman'', Abstract of the monograph ''Leonardo Infinito''

(accessed 22-05-2014) * Wozniak, Katarzyna (Kasia). ''The Warsaw Sforziad''. The Leonardo da Vinci Society, Birkbeck College, London, http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hosted/leonardo/#MM * Wozniak, Katarzyna (Kasia). ''La Bella Principessa'' and the Warsaw ''Sforziad''. Circumstances of Rebinding and Excision of the Portrait, The Leonardo da Vinci Society, Birkbeck College, London: http://www.bbk.ac.uk/hosted/leonardo/


Further reading

* Hewitt, Simon (2019). ''Leonardo Da Vinci and the Book of Doom: Bianca Sforza, The Sforziada and Artful Propaganda in Renaissance Milan''. .


External links


"Mystery of the Masterpiece"
episode of '' Nova (American TV series), Nova'' about the work * Detailed attribution summary including video excerpts on multispectral scanning and Sforziad verification: {{DEFAULTSORT:Bella Principessa, La Works attributed to Leonardo da Vinci 1490s drawings 15th-century portraits Drawings of people Portraits of women