The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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erecting a monument to his father Francesco Sforza could be carried  
into effect. In the following year Ludovico il Moro the young  
aspirant to the throne was exiled to Pisa, and only returned to  
Milan in 1479 when he was Lord (Governatore) of the State of Milan,  
in 1480 after the minister Cecco Simonetta had been murdered. It may  
have been soon after this that Ludovico il Moro announced a  
competition for an equestrian statue, and it is tolerably certain  
that Antonio del Pollajuolo took part in it, from this passage in  
Vasari's Life of this artist: "E si trovo, dopo la morte sua, il  
disegno e modello che a Lodovico Sforza egli aveva fatto per la  
statua a cavallo di Francesco Sforza, duca di Milano; il quale  
disegno e nel nostro Libro, in due modi: in uno egli ha sotto  
Verona; nell'altro, egli tutto armato, e sopra un basamento pieno di  
battaglie, fa saltare il cavallo addosso a un armato; ma la cagione  
perche non mettesse questi disegni in opera, non ho gia potuto  
sapere." One of Pollajuolo's drawings, as here described, has lately  
been discovered by Senatore Giovanni Morelli in the Munich  
Pinacothek. Here the profile of the horseman is a portrait of  
Francesco Duke of Milan, and under the horse, who is galloping to  
the left, we see a warrior thrown and lying on the ground; precisely  
the same idea as we find in some of Leonardo's designs for the  
monument, as on Pl. LXVI, LXVII, LXVIII, LXIX and LXXII No. 1; and,  
as it is impossible to explain this remarkable coincidence by  
supposing that either artist borrowed it from the other, we can only  
conclude that in the terms of the competition the subject proposed  
was the Duke on a horse in full gallop, with a fallen foe under its  
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