LEONARDO DA VINCI (VINCI 1452-AMBOISE 1519)
A nude youth as St John the Baptist
c.1485RCIN 912572
A study of a nude young man, standing turned half to the right, pointing to the right with his right arm. His left hand is resting on a staff. His head with long waving hair, is bent slightly forward and he looks at the spectator. On the right is a sketch of the top of a reed cross. Melzi's 68.
Any ambitious artist in the Renaissance would have made figure studies from a posed model, to hone their draughtsmanship, observational skills and knowledge of human form. This model is posed as St John the Baptist, holding a long reed cross and pointing, as if towards the Saviour. Leonardo prepared the paper with a coloured ground so that he could draw with metalpoint for the outlines and shading, and add highlights with a brush in liquid lead white. The distinctive arrangement of the legs is reproduced in a painting of St Sebastian by a follower of Leonardo, a subject that Leonardo himself sketched repeatedly in the 1480s. The style of the metalpoint dates the work to the mid-1480s, with highlights in white lead applied with a fine brush. The elegance and elongated proportions of Florentine art clearly persisted in Leonardo’s work after he moved to Milan.
Any ambitious artist in the Renaissance would have made figure studies from a posed model, to hone their draughtsmanship, observational skills and knowledge of human form. This model is posed as St John the Baptist, holding a long reed cross and pointing, as if towards the Saviour. Leonardo prepared the paper with a coloured ground so that he could draw with metalpoint for the outlines and shading, and add highlights with a brush in liquid lead white. The distinctive arrangement of the legs is reproduced in a painting of St Sebastian by a follower of Leonardo, a subject that Leonardo himself sketched repeatedly in the 1480s. The style of the metalpoint dates the work to the mid-1480s, with highlights in white lead applied with a fine brush. The elegance and elongated proportions of Florentine art clearly persisted in Leonardo’s work after he moved to Milan.
Text adapted from Leonardo da Vinci: A life in drawing, London, 2018