About This Artwork
Alessandro Vittoria
Italian, 1525-1608
One of the Set of the Four Evangelists: Johnmodeled c. 1580
Terracotta
23 1/8 in. (58.7 cm)
Kate S. Buckingham Endowment, 1953.331
Medieval to Modern European Painting and Sculpture
Gallery 206
Exhibition, Publication and Ownership Histories
Exhibition History
Trent, Castello del Buonconsiglio, "La bellissima maniera, Alessandro Vittoria e la scultura del Cinquecento," 25 June – 26 September 1999, no. 82.
Publication History
Leo Planiscig, Venezianische Bildhauer der Renaissance (Vienna, 1921), pp. 478–79, figs. 503–06.
Art Institute of Chicago, "New Acquisitions," Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly 47, 4 (1953), pp. 70–71.
Hans Huth, "Italienische Kunstwerke im Art Institute von Chicago, USA," Miscellanea bibliothecae hertzianae, edited by Leo Bruhns, Franz Graf, Wolff Metternich, and Ludwig Schudt, Römische Forschungen der Bibliotheca Hertziana 16 (1961), p. 518.
New York, Parke-Bernet Galleries, Inc., The Elms (June 27, 1962), p. 39, no. 189.
Georges S. Salmann, "First Stages in Starting a Collection of Bronzes," Connoisseur 160, 643 (1965), p. 20, fig. 6.
John Maxon, The Art Institute of Chicago (London, 1970), p. 225.
Anne Michael, Four Terracotta Statuettes Attributed to Alessandro Vittoria in the Art Institute of Chicago, master’s thesis (University of Chicago, 1977), figs. 1–8, 30.
Thomas E. Norton, 100 Years of Collecting in America: The Story of Sotheby Parke Bernet (New York, 1984), p. 172 (ill.).
Claudia Kryza-Gersch, "New Light on Nicolò Roccatagliata and His Son Sebastian Nicolini," Nuovi Studi 5 (1998), p. 120, fig. 224.
Ownership History
Adolph Loewi, Venice, by 1939 [according to Kay Robertson, daughter of Adolph Loewi, telephone conversation, November 22, 2002, notes in curatorial file]; Adolph Loewi, Inc., Los Angeles, 1939 [according to Robertson conversation cited above]; sold to the Art Institute, 1953.

