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Milan to honour Leonardo on 500th anniversary of death

Milan to honour Leonardo on 500th anniversary of death

Programme presented in London, Madonna Litta on loan from Russia

London, 28 January 2019, 14:45

Redazione ANSA

ANSACheck

- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

-     ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Milan is gearing up to pay tribute to Leonardo da Vinci on the 500th anniversary of his death with a series of events as part of the 'Milano Leonardo 500' programme, which was presented in London on January 18.
    Italian Ambassador to the UK Raffaele Trombetta and London Deputy Mayor for Culture Justine Simons both attended the presentation.
    One of the big events of the programme is the return to Milan of the Madonna Litta, which the Hermitage Museum in St.
    Petersburg is loaning to the Poldi Pezzoli Museum for a special exhibition.
    Leonardo was active in Milan for 20 years, and his work there left indelible signs, from the canal locks of the Naviglio Grande to the Last Supper.
    The official inauguration of the Milano Leonardo 500 programme will take place on May 15.
    Starting on May 16 at Castello Sforzesco, the Sala delle Asse will reopen after restoration work that began in 2013.
    The work uncovered new fragments of monochrome decoration by Leonardo's own hand, in particular charcoal roots that were a preparatory drawing of the pergola that depicts 16 mulberry trees.
    The restoration included the laser removal of a dulling layer known as scialbo, so visitors will now be able to admire new portions of the drawing that have never been seen before.
    There will be dozens of events, including four exhibitions of drawings from the Codex Atlanticus at the Biblioteca Ambrosiana, as well as an exhibition titled "The Last Supper After Leonardo" at the Fondazione Stelline, which includes contemporary artists' reinterpretations of Leonardo's masterpiece.
    However, a main highlight of the programme is the return home of the Madonna Litta, which was was sold to the Hermitage Museum in 1865 by Duke Antonio Litta Visconti Arese.
    The painting will be on display from November 8, 2019 through February 10, 2020 at the Poldi Pezzoli Museum as part of the exhibition "Around Leonardo: The Madonna Litta and the Artist's Workshop". The loan of the painting, 30 years since the last time it visited Milan, was made possible through an exchange - the Poldi Pezzoli Museum agreed to loan Piero Della Francesca's painting St. Nicholas of Tolentino to the Hermitage - as well as the efforts of the Bracco Foundation.
    The painting may first make a stop in Venice before coming to Milan.
    The attribution of the painting to Leonardo is controversial, and there are some who claim it is the work of one of his students, such as Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio.
    In fact, the painting on loan from the Hermitage will go on display along with a masterpiece by Boltraffio owned by the Poldi Pezzoli Museum, the Madonna of the Rose, as well as other works by Boltraffio and other students of Leonardo.
    This way, the public can come to know just how much cultural heritage Leonardo left to the city of Milan, as well as how attributions can change over time due to new knowledge and tools.
    The presentation of the programme in London, which took place in a full auditorium, was led by Milan Culture Councillor Filippo Del Corno together with the president of Fondazione Stellina, PierCarla Delpiano.
    The presentation concluded with a screening of the short film "Being Leonardo da Vinci" by Massimiliano Finazzer Flory, a testimony to the fact that paying tribute to Leonardo involves all art forms.
   

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