Florence: Meeting the Forger Who Fooled the Louvre

A sketching day in Florence from the Oltrarno side: gesture drawings in the Boboli Gardens, gallery research on Via Maggio, and the strange story of Giovanni Bastianini, the sculptor whose bust fooled the Louvre.

Florence is where art history stops being a book and starts being a queue. Everyone comes for the big names, and fair enough… David is here, the Uffizi is here, half the Renaissance was invented within shouting distance of the Duomo. I am staying up a steep little lane on the Oltrarno side, the workshop side of the river, practically leaning against the Boboli Gardens wall, and I would not swap it for a suite over the Ponte Vecchio.

Sunday is free-entry day at the Boboli, so the whole afternoon went in there with the plan I wrote before I left home: animal subjects, people interacting with the space, quick sketch series. Turns out the local wildlife is mostly lizards and the people mostly melt onto benches in the heat, which is honestly perfect for gesture work. Slow models are a gift. And from the top of the gardens you get the payoff view:

Florence from the high wall above the Boboli. The Duomo sits in that skyline like it owns the place, because it does. Open full size

But you know me. In a city full of certified geniuses, I fell for the con man.

Marble bust by Giovanni Bastianini in a Florence gallery
A bust by Giovanni Bastianini, 1830 to 1868. Look at that quiet face. Now guess the century. Everyone did, and everyone got it wrong.

This calm marble lady was made by Giovanni Bastianini, a stonecutter’s apprentice from the quarries at Fiesole. In the 1860s his dealer sold one of his busts, a portrait of the poet Benivieni, as a genuine Renaissance work. It was praised as “school of Verrocchio” and the Louvre paid 13,600 francs for it. The Louvre! The scam only came apart because the dealer got greedy about his cut and told everyone. Bastianini himself never presented the work as old… he just carved like a man born 400 years too late, and the experts did the rest.

I stood in front of that bust for a long time thinking about hands and credit. In animation we made whole films where nobody outside the studio could name a single artist who drew them. The work was real. The names were optional. Bastianini would have understood us completely.

Dense black ink study over a printed page, drawn in Florence
My contribution to Florence: ink over whatever paper was closest. The city gets into your linework whether you invite it or not.

The afternoon was the businesslike bit: walking the creative side of the river, poking my nose into the contemporary galleries along Via Maggio, noting prices, sizes, and who actually stops to look. That research matters as much as the sketching… if I want my ink work hanging in rooms like these one day, I need to know how these rooms think. Between galleries I filled pages. Fast, messy, honest pages, the kind you do standing up while your gelato melts. Thirty-seven photos and one very inky thumb later, I think Florence and I understand each other.

Next stop: north, to the lake. The quiet end of it, where the plan is a fresh page every single day.

Still hungry? Here’s more

Eurasian eagle-owl with orange eyes and brown streaked feathers perched on a rail in front of a grey stone wall

Varenna: an Owl Above the Lake

A sketching day in Varenna on Lake Como. Train up, walking trail through the olive trees to Castello di Vezio, eagle owls at close range, then gesture studies on the ferry pier as the lake week wraps up.

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