There were also at least twenty copies painted by some of Leonardo’s followers. But a historic reference remained: the widow of Charles I had commissioned Wenceslaus Hollar to make an etching of the painting. The historical trail of Leonardo’s version was lost after the painting passed from Charles II to the Duke of Buckingham, whose son sold it in 1763. In the inventory of Salai’s estate was a paint- ing of “Christ in the Manner of God the Father.” Such a piece was catalogued in the collections of the English king Charles I, who was beheaded in 1649, and also Charles II, who restored the monarchy in 1660. Leonardo’s version contains some of his distinctive features: a figure that manages to be at once both reassuring and unsettling, a mysterious straight-on stare, an elusive smile, cascading curls, and sfumato softness.īefore the painting was authenticated, there was historic evidence that one like it existed. The Salvator Mundi motif, which features Christ with an orb topped by a cross, known as a globus cruciger, had become very popular by the early 1500s, especially among northern European painters.
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