| June
16, 2005
UC San Diego Alumnus, High-Tech Art Sleuth, Finds
Long-Lost Da Vinci Masterpiece Behind Palazzo Walls
By Paul Mueller
It could be
a scene from the “Da Vinci Code:” A high-tech art
sleuth finds a hollow space behind an Italian palazzo’s
murals, and believes he may have discovered a Da Vinci masterpiece
not seen since 1563.
In a case of life imitating
art, Maurizio Seracini, an internationally recognized expert
in high-technology art analysis, has done just that –
and, in an odd twist, he does indeed appear, as himself, in
Dan Brown’s popular bestseller about secrets hidden in
Leonardo’s work – the book’s only non-fictional
character.
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| Detail
from a copy of Leonardo da Vinci's long-lost "Battle
of Anghiari," based on preliminary sketches and copies
of the work during the artist's life. Maurizio Seracini,
a noted art conservation and authentication expert, believes
the fresco is hidden behind an existing fresco by the artist
Giorgio Vasari in Florence's Palazzo Vecchio. Credit: The
Louvre, Paris. |
(In the “Da Vinci
Code”, Seracini uses his investigational skills to show
that Leonardo’s “Adoration of the Magi” has
been painted over by other artists and can no longer be considered
a true Da Vinci.)
Seracini, 55, an alumnus
of the University of California, San Diego and a native Florentine,
thinks he may be close to finding the lost fresco “Battle
of Anghiari” behind murals by Giorgio Vasari in Florence’s
Palazzo Vecchio. Using radar, x-rays and other devices, he discovered
a narrow cavity behind the Vasari fresco “Battle of Marciano,”
and believes that the latter artist, an admirer of the great
Leonardo, intentionally created the space to preserve the master’s
work.
“Leonardo’s
‘Battle of Anghiari’ was considered the highest
work of art of the Renaissance at that time,” Seracini
said. “For over 50 years afterwards, documents spoke of
the wonderful horses of Leonardo with the highest admiration.”
If he and other researchers
can prove that the Vasari murals conceal a greater treasure,
“it may be possible,” Seracini believes, “to
remove the Vasari fresco and the wall behind, extract Leonardo’s
mural, and finally put the Vasari back in place.”
Seracini, who heads
Editech -- a Florence-based company he founded in 1977 focused
on the “diagnostics of cultural heritage” -- estimates
that he’s worked on some 2,000 paintings, including 31
works by Raphael and three others by Da Vinci. Most of his equipment,
he says, has been adapted from medical devices. Infrared, thermographic,
ultraviolet and other kinds of scanners allow him to see images
behind a painting’s visible layers.
Now those high-tech
tools have peered behind a mural, into a palazzo’s walls,
to find another mural, long thought destroyed or lost to the
ages.
Art historians have
known that “Battle of Anghiari” existed from early
sketches, from the copies made by Da Vinci contemporaries, and
from the writings of those who saw it – one of whom described
it as “miraculous.”
Seracini received his
bachelor’s degree from UCSD’s Revelle College in
1973; he majored in applied mathematics and bioengineering,
and spoke at his alma mater in April, as a Bioengineering Distinguished
Lecturer, on “The Role of Science in Conservation of Cultural
Heritage.” In 1975, he received a degree in electronic
engineering from the University of Padua in Italy.
He credits his UCSD
teachers – who had him experiment with lasers on fragments
of blackened marble from Venice and Florence – with the
spark that “ignited a long-lasting desire to blend art
and science.”
During his time as
a student in San Diego, he also traveled to UCLA to study under
Carlo Pedretti, a scholar of Renaissance art and a specialist
in Da Vinci.
It was his mentor Pedretti,
seeking a non-invasive way to search for Leonardo’s masterpiece,
who steered Seracini to the murals in the Palazzo Vecchio.
The long-lost fresco
Seracini may have found is also known by its Anglicized title
“Battle of Angiers.” Begun in 1505, the painting
is considered by many art historians to be Leonardo’s
most important – and largest – masterpiece. Vasari,
commissioned by the Medici family in 1593 to remodel the palazzo’s
hall, might have covered the unfinished work with a wall.
Most art historians
believe, says Seracini, that even if the incomplete Da Vinci
fresco is behind the wall, it may have deteriorated beyond salvation.
Like the doctor he studied to be, he takes a physician’s
detached approach to the prospect. “We’ll investigate,”
he says, “and see.” It’s the code Da Vinci
himself might have followed.
Media Contacts: Maurizio
Seracini, or Paul K.
Mueller, (858) 534-8564
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