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Monument to Leonardo da Vinci

Coordinates: 45°28′01″N 9°11′24″E / 45.46698°N 9.190017°E / 45.46698; 9.190017
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Monument to Leonardo da Vinci
ArtistPietro Magni
Year1858–1872
MediumCarrara marble
LocationPiazza della Scala, Milan
Coordinates45°28′01″N 9°11′24″E / 45.46698°N 9.190017°E / 45.46698; 9.190017

The monument to Leonardo da Vinci is a commemorative sculptural group in the Piazza della Scala, Milan, unveiled in 1872. It is surmounted with a statue of Leonardo da Vinci, while the base has full-length figures of four of his pupils: Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio, Marco d'Oggiono, Cesare da Sesto, and Gian Giacomo Caprotti (under the name Andrea Salaino).

The monument was executed by the sculptor Pietro Magni, beginning in 1858; due to Milan's transition from the Lombardo-Venetian Kingdom to first the Kingdom of Sardinia and then the Kingdom of Italy, funding for its construction had problems and delays. After its inauguration the monument was much criticised because of the choice of location and because it was considered a legacy of the Austrian administration.

History

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An early project

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In 1834, references are found to a "noble and highly cultured fellow citizen of ours" from Milan who intended to create a bronze monument to Leonardo at his own expense.[1] The anonymous person had also obtained permission from the Austrian government to place the monument in the courtyard of the Palazzo Brera,[2] decorating the access to the double staircase. Monuments to Cesare Beccaria and Giuseppe Parini were also being prepared for the staircase at the time.

But the most sumptuous monument for which models are now being made, to be cast in bronze, will be that of the great Leonardo da Vinci, which is being erected by one of our most generous gentlemen at his own expense, not only a lover of fine arts, but professing sculpture for pleasure himself. He did not want the design to be seen or judged until the work was finished, promising to have it completed in three years. Thus all was accepted by the Superiority, who alone will have presented the design to it, and he was granted permission for its placement, in that space of a platform, which divides the two staircases on the ground floor and thus comes to remain in front of the great doorway, in the middle of the facade, so that its view will also be revealed from the street. It is known, however, concerning the design, that it is large and copious in figures, by descriptions interpellated by some, and that it will be very expensive.

— Letter from the painter Paolo Landriani, 1834[3]

The granite base was to have been about 2 meters high, with bronze figures about 3 meters high, showing a personification of Immortality in the act of handing a laurel wreath to Leonardo, intent on deep meditations on his books. A bas-relief on the base would have reproduced Leonardo's Last Supper.[1] However, this project was not completed.

The 1857 competition

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Pietro Magni

In 1856, among the competitions of the Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, the design of a monument to Leonardo in the form of a fountain to be placed in the courtyard of the Palazzo Brera was requested.

A rich honorary monument to Leonardo da Vinci, composed of marble and bronze, serving at the same time as a source of drinking water, to be placed in the Palazzo Brera facing the main gate, and set where the present trumpet stands. The project may be both in drawing and in relief. The drawing will be of the precise measurement of 0.54 meters by 0.81 meters; the model will be 1.08 meters high, and it will be marked how much there is of marble and how much of bronze. Prize = A gold medal of the intrinsic value of twenty sequins.[4]

On February 8, 1857, the Emperor Franz Joseph determined that a proper monument should be erected in Piazza San Fedele with a marble statue 3.6 meters high.[5] A new program was therefore established on October 1, 1857, with a deadline of October 31, 1858.[6]

On December 22, 1858, the commission unanimously decided to choose the "Think in marble"[clarification needed] model submitted by Pietro Magni; however, it was also pointed out that it would require an expenditure greater than the 60,000 Austrian liras stipulated in the call for proposals.[7] It was also decided that the monument would be destined for Piazza della Scala.[8]

Construction

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Original maquette for the monument
The revised design, as it appeared in 1864

Magni set to work, but the outcome of the Second Italian War of Independence forced him to turn first to Urbano Rattazzi, at that time the minister of the interior, and then to Cavour, president of the Council of Ministers.[9] In fact, the government believed that it had no obligation to Magni since the competition had not been approved by the authorities and the amount of expenditure planned for his work was greater than that established by the competition. However, Cavour instructed Massimo d'Azeglio, Governor of Milan, to examine the situation in the sculptor's studio and make a decision.[10]

D'Azeglio not only confirmed the design but also suggested essential changes that increased the cost of the monument.

And it was especially following V. E.'s wise observations and suggestions that the thought arose to detach from the monument the said 4 statues of the pupils and to place them on separate pedestals around the monument, thus obtaining a much more homogeneous eurhythmic line. Moreover, having substituted for the primitive model with a round base, the other with an octangular base of pure Bramantesque style with the addition of the various ornaments, and with the introduction of 4 large bronze bas-reliefs representing scenes from the life and works of the great artist, it was achieved, as the E. V. had also very appropriately suggested, that the monument be given all that majesty and grandeur that was required of it, both because of the importance of the subject and because of the size of the square for which it is intended.

— Pietro Magni to Massimo d'Azeglio, June 20, 1860[11]

Magni left for Bologna as standard-bearer of the National Guard and on his return in 1861 found Giuseppe Pasolini as the new governor; in order to try to obtain confirmation of the commission to build the monument, he thus contacted the Academy, d'Azeglio (who had retired from politics), Pasolini, the mayor of Milan Antonio Beretta and the president of the Council of Ministers Bettino Ricasoli.[12]

A value of about 100,000 liras (corresponding to the 60,000 Austrian liras of the competition plus another 47,000 Italian liras) was estimated for the monument's construction.[13] In 1862 the authorities requested changes to the project to reduce the expense to 90,200 liras, and the city of Milan pledged a contribution of 20,000 liras.[14]

Magni carried on with the monument by incurring expenses for materials; by 1867, however, he had received no payment and the ministerial file had made no progress. He then decided to take advantage of the inauguration of the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II alongside the Piazza della Scala, scheduled for September 15; he installed a model of the monument at his own expense for the entire month of September, hoping that the authorities, seeing it, would finally allow the work to be completed.[15]

In 1868 Magni was informed that the government intended to award him only the original amount of the competition, which amounted to about 52,000 Italian liras; even counting the 20,000 for which the municipality of Milan had pledged, he would suffer a net loss of at least 15,000 liras for out-of-pocket expenses.[16]

As a last hope, in 1879 Magni wrote to Filippo Antonio Gualterio, minister of the Royal Household, to try to get the sovereign to intervene, but to no avail.[17] At the same time he was presented with a warning from the Royal State Property Office because he was late in paying rent for the premises he used for his studio; in early 1870 all his models and all his works were seized for auction.[18] Giovanni Battista Brambilla bought them all to return them to the sculptor.[19]

Seeing the impossibility of obtaining what was owed, Magni in August 1870 presented a writ of judicial warning to the Ministry of Public Education.[20] Finally, with the contract signed on March 23, 1871, he managed to obtain a total of 72,000 liras.[21] The amount was less than that allocated for other monuments, such as that to King Charles Albert in Turin (700,000 liras) or that to Cavour in Milan (more than 100,000 liras).[21]

According to Ettore Verga, the general hostility toward the monument's construction was not due to the sculptor Magni, but to the monument's origin itself.[22] It was Elia Lombardini, head of the office of public constructions under the Austrian government, who proposed its construction, and it was Lombardini himself who tried to get it accepted after the unification of Italy by presenting Leonardo as the "true creator of hydraulic science".[23][24]

Inauguration

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Inauguration of the monument

The monument was unveiled on September 4, 1872, in the presence of Prince Umberto, to coincide with the opening in Milan of the first congress of engineers and architects.[25] The National Exhibition of Fine Arts was also underway.

On September 4, the solemn unveiling of the monument to Leonardo da Vinci took place in Milan, erected on the square of the Teatro alla Scala, which presented a marvelous spectacle on that day. In the middle stood the monument all veiled by curtains, with red and white flagpoles around it. In the wide space between it and the theater an elegant white and gold pavilion had been erected, adorned with white and blue draperies and baskets of flowers. The windows and balconies of the houses surrounding the square were adorned with flags and tapestries. The ceremony was very simple and beautiful. At three o'clock in the afternoon Prince Umberto, the mayor, the aldermen, all the members of the Artistic Congress and the members of the Italian Engineers and Architects Congress with other guests went to take their places in the pavilion. The canvases covering the monument then fell, and it suddenly appeared in all its splendor, amid the thunderous applause of the assembled people, and the harmonies of the music of the National band. After the mayor's speech, the minutes were read by which the monument was handed over to the city of Milan, and, after the handover, the band resumed playing the royal march, the guests moved around the monument, followed by the flags of the workers' guilds, and with that the ceremony ended.[26]

In the evening, celebrations were also held in the Piazza del Duomo with flares. An electric light was projected from a window of the Teatro alla Scala, illuminating the monument in various colors.[27]

In the depictions made on the occasion of the inauguration, the four pedestals with the statues of the students were no longer separate (as planned in earlier versions), but joined to the central octagonal base.

Description

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Click on the image to open the SVG file and have an interactive three-dimensional view.

The monument consists of five statues placed on a plinth of pink granite from Baveno, 7.08 meters high.[28] The central body of the plinth has an octagonal shape with unequal sides. Its center is placed in axis with the Galleria Vittorio Emmanuele II.

In the center is a 4.40 meter–high marble statue of Leonardo da Vinci.[28] He is portrayed in a pensive pose with his hands clasped to his chest. The name LEONARDO is inscribed on the front of the statue's base; whereas on the back the inscription reads PIETRO MAGNI FECE.

At a lower level, four pedestals protrude from the short sides of the octagonal plinth on which the other four marble sculptures, 2.60 meters high, stand. They represent four of Leonardo's pupils: Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio, Marco d'Oggiono, Cesare da Sesto, and Gian Giacomo Caprotti (under the name Andrea Salaino).

On the major sides of the octagonal plinth, four marble bas-reliefs depict four aspects of Leonardo's life in Milan: Leonardo the Painter, which shows him painting the Last Supper in the refectory of Santa Maria delle Grazie; Leonardo the Sculptor, in which he is shown modeling the equestrian statue of Francesco Sforza; Leonardo the Architect and Strategist, in which he directs the building of Cesare Borgia's fortifications in Romagna; and Leonardo the Plumber, in which he attends to the pipeline work for the irrigation of Lombardy.[29]

Below the bas-reliefs, between the pedestals, is a four-part inscription dictated by Professor Gilberto Govi and inscribed in gilded bronze letters[30] with the dedication:

AL
RINNOVATORE
DELLE ARTI E DELLE SCIENZE

NATO IN VINCI DI VALDARNO
NEL MCCCCLII
MORTO IN CLOUX PRESSO AMBOISE
NEL MDXIX

LUNGAMENTE OSPITE INVIDIATO
IN MILANO, DOVE EBBE
AMICI, DISCEPOLI, GLORIA

IL GIORNO IV DI SETTEMBRE
DEL MDCCCLXXII
QUESTO MONUMENTO
FU POSTO

'To the
renovator
of the arts and sciences'

'Born in Vinci in the Valdarno
in 1452
Died in Cloux near Amboise
in 1519'

'Long an envied guest
in Milan, where he had
friends, disciples, glory'

'On the fourth day of September
of 1872
this monument
was placed'

Criticism

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Giuseppe Rovani

There were varying degrees of negative criticism of the monument, which was not considered Magni's best work;[31] some would have liked Francesco Melzi among the student statues,[32] while others would have preferred to replace them with personifications of mechanics, music, geometry, and philosophy.[33] The pose of the figures, likened to puppets "with their hands hanging down – like hands of lead," was also criticized.[34]

In Piazza della Scala, hands were laid on the foundations of the monument to Vinci. I would have loved to see it placed in the small courtyard of Brera, not in front of an opera house like a singer or music master. The model we saw on the spot, if it is not modified and altered from scratch, was indeed ugly! Magni, who can neither read nor write, made himself famous with his Reading Girl, which he later repeated many dozens of times. A monument to Leonardo required bronze and granite and an artist who understood his art a little better.

— Girolamo d'Adda, December 19, 1871[35]

I swear to everyone that the Leonardo monument is a horror.

Nickname

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The monument's nickname "un litro in quattro" ('one liter in four'), popular in the late 19th century, was due to the resemblance of the monument's five statues to a wine bottle with four glasses around it. Several sources of the time attribute the creation of this nickname to Giuseppe Rovani.[37]

In September 1872, the latter's monument to Leonardo da Vinci was inaugurated in Piazza della Scala. Everyone knows that Leonardo's statue stands tall in the center. On the four sides of the lower level stand four of his most valiant pupils. The artist heard all kinds of things about his work. Rovani had not yet opened his mouth, and Magni was goading him to speak. Finally, on a certain evening, sitting with four friends at the dinner table of some tavern I no longer know, the artist of the chisel returned to the assault against the artist of the pen so that he would once and for all blurt out. Rovani pleads somewhat, then grabs the liter of wine that towered before them, and places it right in the middle, between the four drinkers, including himself, exclaiming:

— Your monument is here: it's a liter in four!

The laughter went through the roof. But Pietro Magni did not quite cope with the banter. He remembered it and still regretted it many years later.[38]

Interventions

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The wrapped monument in November 1970

On May 18, 1919, on the 400th anniversary of Leonardo's death, a bronze crown decorated with Vincian knots was added to the foot of the plinth.[39][40]

nel iv centenario di gloria
il 2 maggio 1919
inaugurandosi nel nome
di
LEONARDO
i lavori del porto di milano
il comune pose
'In the fourth centenary of glory
on May 2, 1919,
it was inaugurated in the name
of
LEONARDO
the works of the port of Milan
were conducted by the municipality'

Wrapped monument

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In November 1970, as part of the demonstrations to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the Nouveau Réalisme movement, Christo and Jeanne-Claude were commissioned by the city of Milan to create a performance. On November 24, the monument to Victor Emmanuel II was wrapped with tarps and tied with red rope; however, due to protests, it was decided to remove the covering the next day. On the same days, the monument to Leonardo da Vinci was also wrapped; on the night of November 28, some young people (apparently neo-fascists) set fire to the tarpaulin, which was removed by firefighters responding to the scene.[41][42]

References

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  1. ^ a b Monumento 1834, p. 362
  2. ^ Appunti, p. 182
  3. ^ Borghi, p. 142
  4. ^ Concorsi, pp. 51–52
  5. ^ Per un monumento, pp. 73–75
  6. ^ Il monumento, p. 7
  7. ^ Il monumento, pp. 7–8
  8. ^ Il monumento, p. 13
  9. ^ Il monumento, pp. 8–11
  10. ^ Il monumento,  pp. 11–12
  11. ^ Il monumento, p. 14
  12. ^ Il monumento, pp. 15–18
  13. ^ Il monumento, p. 22
  14. ^ Il monumento, pp. 24–25
  15. ^ Il monumento, pp. 29–33
  16. ^ Il monumento, pp. 34–35
  17. ^ Il monumento, pp. 35–39
  18. ^ Il monumento, pp. 39–43
  19. ^ See also obituary in Decessi, p. 691.
  20. ^ Il monumento, p. 47
  21. ^ a b Il monumento, p. 52
  22. ^ Verga 1908, pp. 98–101
  23. ^ Lombardini, p. iii
  24. ^ Cf. Siro Valerio cited in Verga 1908, pp. 100–101.
  25. ^ Rendiconto, p. 594
  26. ^ Inaugurazione, p. 122
  27. ^ Le feste di Milano,  p. 137
  28. ^ a b Milano tecnica, p. 302
  29. ^ Guida-album,  pp. 40–41
  30. ^ Monumento 1872a,  p. 4
  31. ^ Monumento 1872b, p. 326
  32. ^ Riccardi, pp. 3–4
  33. ^ Soster, p. 249
  34. ^ Dossi, p. 186
  35. ^ Di Teodoro, p. 165
  36. ^ Carducci, p. 329
  37. ^ Milano nuova,  p. 9
  38. ^ Giarelli, p. 45
  39. ^ Cronaca, p. 222
  40. ^ Verga 1919,  pp. 333–334
  41. ^ "Wrapped Monuments". Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  42. ^ Panza.

Bibliography

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