

First Fruits of the Earth Offered to Saturn
Giorgio Vasari (Italian, 1511–1574)
Pen and brown ink, brown wash, over traces of red chalk
Giorgio Vasari (Italian, 1511–1574)
Pen and brown ink, brown wash, over traces of red chalk
6 3/4 x 15 3/8 in. (17.1 X 39.2 cm)
Rogers Fund, 1971 (1971.273)
The drawing, surely from the hand of Vasari himself, is a study for an Allegory of Earth painted by his assistant Cristofano Gherardi in the Sala degli Elementi, Palazzo Vecchio, Florence. There are a number of differences between the preparatory drawing and the finished fresco. Vasari supplied a full description of the complex symbolism of this allegorical composition that is dominated by the figure of Saturn holding up a serpent that bites its own tail. This circular symbol is said to be an Egyptian hieroglyph, symbolic of the rotundity of the heavens among other things.








