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According to Kober, the painting originally was created for Michelangelo's friend Vittoria Colonna when Michelangelo was about 70 and was passed to a Catholic cardinal, an archbishop and a family in Croatia that hung it in palaces. Kober says that through marriage it found its way to a German baroness who willed it to his great-great-grandfather's sister-in-law. The painting, after arriving in America in 1883, hung briefly in a Syracuse museum and in a temporary exhibit at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibition opening Tuesday marks the first time since 1885 that it has been publicly displayed. Michelangelo authority William E. Wallace, after examining the painting last year, stopped short of saying it was the work of Michelangelo's brush
-- but didn't rule out the possibility. "There's never proof, unfortunately," Wallace, an art history professor at Washington University in St. Louis, said then. "You can do scientific analysis of the paint and the surface and the panel, and all that tells you is we're dealing with something old from the 16th century." Even so, Wallace said, the painting's age and well-documented history make it deserving of display and the chance for scholarly debate about its origins. ___ Online: http://www.theamericanmike.com/
[Associated
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