Leonardo Drawing, Portrait Mark 500 Years Since His Death

In this photo taken on Tuesday, April 30, 2019, a drawing which has been recently confirmed as a portrait of Leonardo Da Vinci and forms part of the Royal Collection, at Windsor Castle in Windsor, England. The newly identified sketch will go on public display for the first time later this month in Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing at The Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace in London between May 24 - Oct. 13. (Steve Parsons/PA via AP)

BY JILL LAWLESS

LONDON (AP)
ā€” A drawing of a bearded, pensive-looking man owned by Queen Elizabeth II is a portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, a royal art adviser said Thursday on the 500th anniversary of the artist and polymathā€™s death.

Martin Clayton, head of prints at the Royal Collection, said the sketch was made by one of Leonardoā€™s assistants shortly before his death on May 2, 1519.

Clayton said ā€œthe elegant straight nose, the line of the beard rising diagonally up the cheek to the earā€ and other details strongly resemble the only other known portrait of Leonardo done in his lifetime, by Francesco Melzi.

Clayton said ā€œthere are strong indications that this too is a depiction of the artist.ā€

The portrait will go on display alongside about 200 drawings from the monarchā€™s huge collection of Leonardo works at the Queenā€™s Gallery in Buckingham Palace from May 24 to Oct. 13.

The presidents of Italy and France were due to attend a ceremony Thursday in Amboise, France, where Leonardo died 500 years ago, and galleries around the world with a link to the artist are celebrating his work.

Leonardo is considered by many the ultimate Renaissance genius, combining the roles of artist, scientist and inventor.

ā€œThere really hasnā€™t been anybody then or since who has combined this extraordinary genius for these totally different areas of achievement,ā€ said Gregory Rubinstein, worldwide head of Old Master drawings at Sothebyā€™s . ā€œI think thatā€™s whatā€™s at the heart of our fascination.ā€

Sothebyā€™s announced Thursday that a major, rarely seen Leonardo drawing is going on display in New York.

The auction house is hanging ā€œLeda and the Swanā€ ā€” last displayed publicly in 2003 ā€” in its Manhattan galleries next month as part of an exhibition of treasures from Chatsworth, one of Britainā€™s grandest country houses.

Leonardo created the pen-and-ink drawing in 1506, at the same time he was working on the ā€œMona Lisa.ā€ It depicts Leda, wife of the king of Sparta, with the god Jupiter, who has disguised himself as a swan to seduce her.

The drawing was a preparatory sketch for a painting that appears never to have been completed.

Rubinstein said the ā€œvery complete and very beautifulā€ drawing is ā€œa key document of a lost project.ā€

ā€œThis was obviously a pretty serious project, but itā€™s a very mysterious one because there is no surviving record of any commission and no painting survives,ā€ he said.

The drawing has been in the collection of Chatsworthā€™s owners, the dukes of Devonshire, for almost 300 years. It was almost lost when it was loaned to an exhibition in Milan in 1939, shortly before the outbreak of World War II. It survived the war hidden in the Castel Santā€™Angelo fortress in Rome.

Sothebyā€™s New York galleries, newly redesigned by architect Shohei Shigematsu, open to the public on Friday. The Chatsworth exhibition runs June 28-Sept. 18.

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