The Cumaean Sibyl (after Michelangelo)

Jean Robert Ango French
After Michelangelo Buonarroti Italian

Not on view

Little is known about Ango, who was a French draftsman active in Rome in the 1760s. He befriended many young art students at the French Academy in Rome, although not himself a pensionnaire. He most likely earned a living by making red-chalk copies of works by his friends and of paintings in local collections and churches. On this sheet, he copied not a whole composition, but two separate motifs from the Sistine Chapel ceiling. The image on the upper part of the sheet shows the pendentive featuring the Cumaean sibyl, one of the five female prophets depicted on the ceiling. The sketch below is of one of the triangular spandrels, which contain family groups of the ancestors of Christ.

The Cumaean Sibyl (after Michelangelo), Jean Robert Ango (French, active Rome, 1759–70, died after 1773), Red chalk

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