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LEONARDO DA VINCI (VINCI 1452-AMBOISE 1519)

The head of Judas

c.1495

RCIN 912547

A study of the head and neck of a man, with the head slightly averted from the spectator, in profile to the right. He has a hooked nose, close-set lips and a strongly-modelled muscular neck. Melzi's number 33.

This is one of several autograph head studies for the Last Supper in the Royal Collection: RCIN 912552 (St James), RCIN 912551 (St Philip), RCIN 912548 (St Bartholomew). In addition there are two accurate copies of Leonardo’s lost study for St Simon (RCIN 912549, 912550). The heads of Judas and St Bartholomew may be definitive drawings for Leonardo to consult while working (there is no evidence that he used a full-scale cartoon for the painting), or even ‘fair copies’ by Leonardo, intended to preserve his invention for future reference. Their careful finish has led to doubts about their authenticity, and while they are drawn with Leonardo’s usual sensitivity, the profile of Judas may have been strengthened by a later hand. Leonardo did not conceive of Judas as facially repulsive, but subsequent copyists of the head and later restorers of the mural exaggerated the stereotypical semitic/criminal features of Judas to an increasingly grotesque degree, hooking his nose down almost to meet his chin. The head in this drawing registers mild surprise rather than evil intent.

Leonardo’s greatest work to reach completion was the Last Supper, painted for Ludovico Sforza in the refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan, after work on the Sforza horse had been suspended in 1494. This revolutionary exercise in the depiction of emotion shows the reaction of the Disciples to Christ’s announcement of his imminent betrayal. The painting was complete by 1498, but Leonardo’s experimental technique was soon deteriorating, and what we see now is a ghost of his intentions.

Text adapted from Leonardo da Vinci: A life in drawing, London, 2018






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