About the Artwork
Pollaiuolo created in this figure an expressive Image of the beautiful biblical heroine and symbol of the Florentine republic. Working in both Florence and Rome, Pollaiuolo produced paintings, engravings, drawings, embroidery designs, and works in silver and is known especially for his development of the bronze statuette.
Judith
ca. 1470
Pollaiuolo
1429 - 1498
Italian
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Bronze with traces of gilding
Sculpture without base 17 x 8 1/8 x 3 1/2 inches (H x W x D) Including base: 21 1/8 × 8 1/8 × 4 9/16 inches (H x W x D)
Sculpture
European Sculpture and Dec Arts
Gift of Eleanor Clay Ford
37.147
Public Domain
Markings
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Provenance
Sir William Richard Drake [1817–1890] (Weybridge Surrey, England);by descent to Mrs. E.K. Hornsby-Drake (London, England);
private collection (Paris, France);
Dr. Frey von Stamore;
(Arnold Seligmann, Rey, & Co.) (New York, New York, USA);
Eleanor Clay Ford [1896–1976] (Grosse Pointe, Michigan, USA);
1937-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)
For more information on provenance, please visit:
Provenance pageExhibition History
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The exhibition history of a number of objects in our collection only begins after their acquisition by the museum, and may reflect an incomplete record.
We welcome your feedback for correction and/or improvement.
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Exh. cat., Burlington Fine Arts Club. London, 1879, no. 415. [as Pollaiuolo]
Valentiner, W.R. Italian Gothic and Early Renaissance Sculptures. Exh. cat., DIA. Detroit, 1938, no. 52 (ill.) [unpaginated].
Middledorf, U. "Die Ausstellung italienischer Renaissanceskulptur in Detroit." Pantheon 22, p. 336.
Ragghianti, C. "La Mostra di scultura italianna antica a Detroit." Critica d'Arte 3 (August-December 1938): p. 180.
Valentiner, W.R. "Late Gothic Sculpture in Detroit." Art Quarterly 6, no. 4 (Autumn 1943): pp. 276-305.
Valentiner, W.R. "A Pollaiuolo for Detroit." The Art News, Nov. 6, 1937, p. 9.
Sabatini, A. Antonio e Piero Pollaiuolo. Florence, 1944, p. 99.
Ortolani, S. Il Pollaiulol. Milan, 1948, pp. 165, 225.
Steingraber, E. "Studien zur florentiner Goldschmiedekunst I'." Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorishen Institutes in Florenz 7 (August 1955): p. 97, no. 17.
Richardson, W.P. "Bertoldo and Verrocchio: Two Fifteenth Century Florentine Bronzes." Art Quarterly 22, no. 3 (Autumn 1959): pp. 205-215.
Greenleaf, William. From These Beginnings: The Early Philanthropies of Henry and Edsel Ford, 1911–1936. Detroit, 1964, p. 163.
The Italian Heritage. Sales cat., Wildenstein & Co, Inc. New York,1967, no. 18 (ill.).
Busignani, A. Pollaiuolo. Florence, 1969, p. 108.
Seymour, C. Jr. The Sculpture of Verrocchio. London, 1971, p. 126.
Ettlinger, L.D. Antonio and Piero Pollaiuolo. 1978, no. 65. [as 19th century replica]
"Family Art Game," DIA Advertising Supplement, Detroit Free Press, May 20, 1979, p. 25 (ill.).
"Family Art Game," DIA Advertising Supplement, Detroit News/Detroit Free Press, April 18, 1982, p. 11 (ill.).
Italian Renaissance Sculpture in the Time of Donatello. Exh. cat., Detroit Institute of Arts and Kimbell Art Museum. Detroit and Fort Worth, 1985, pp. 199-201, p. 70 (pl. 23).
Avery, C. "Donatello Celebrations: A major exhibition at Detroit, Fort Worth and Florence." Apollo 123, no. 287 (January 1986): p. 18 (fig. 4).
Butterfield, A. and D. Franklin. "A Documented episode in the history of Renaissance 'terracruda' sculpture." The Burlington Magazine CXL (December 1998): p. 820 (fig. 47).
Darr, A.P., P. Barnet, A. Bostrom, C. Avery, et al. Catalogue of Italian Sculpture in the Detroit Institute of Arts, 2 vols. London, 2002, I, cat. 57.
Crum, Roger J. Judith between the Private and Public Realms in Renaissance Florence. Cambridge, 2010, pp. 294, 297.
Principi, Lorenzo. The Master of the Unruly Children: River God and Bacchus. London, 2016, p. 16.
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Credit Line for Reproduction
Pollaiuolo, Judith, ca. 1470, bronze with traces of gilding. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of Eleanor Clay Ford, 37.147.
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