with the
Crucifixion,
Bargello The only fully documented works by Finiguerra which survive are the
intarsia figures for the cathedral, over half life-size, executed from his cartoons for the sacristy. But these seems so fully in the style of Antonio del Pollaiuolo that Konrad Oberhauser thought it "extremely doubtful" that he actually designed them himself. But he is thought to be responsible for a number of other works: a few nielli, and sulphur casts from them and others, and over a hundred drawings.
Drawings Much the largest group of drawings is in the
Uffizi, some of which are inscribed "Maso Finiguerra" in a seventeenth-century writing, probably by
Filippo Baldinucci, curator of the Medici collections. These depict many figures of the studio and the street, to all appearance members of the artists own family and workshop, drawn direct from life, and used "as a repository of figural ideas that could be used by Finiguerra to speed up the compositional process". The Uffizi group includes 14 studies of birds and animals, some apparently copied from other drawings, such as a rather stylized
cockerel. There are two large drawings on
vellum (both 28 x 41 cm, plus change) which show scenes from the
Old Testament and are crowded with figures. These are
Moses on Mount Sinai, and the Brazen Serpent below in the
British Museum, and
The Flood in the
Kunsthalle, Hamburg. These were apparently intended as finished artworks, though both were later copied as engravings by
Francesco Rosselli. The drawings can be dated from their style and the contemporary costumes to the 1450s up to Finiguerra's death in 1464. They agree strictly with the accounts of Finiguerra's drawings left us by Vasari and Baldinucci, and disagree in no respect with the character of the inlaid figures of the sacristy. That he was probably also an engraver in niello appears from the fact that figures from the Uflizi series of drawings are repeated among the rare anonymous Florentine niello prints of the time (the chief collection of which, formerly belonging to the marquis of Salamanca, is now in
Edmond de Rothschild Collection at the
Louvre). The
Florentine Picture-Chronicle was attributed to Finiguerra when first published in 1893, by
Sidney Colvin, but is now more often attributed to
Baccio Baldini, or an artist of his circle. This album is an unusual and ambitious attempt at a "pictorial chronicle of the world", which was never completed. The drawings are in black chalk, then ink and usually wash.
Nielli and casts The attribution of a group of nielli, in particular some in the
Bargello, is complicated by problems arising from the matching up of documentary records, and the remarks of Vasari and
Benvenuto Cellini, with the surviving works. As mentioned above, in 1452 Maso made a niello silver
pax for the
Florence Baptistery, commissioned by the
Arte di Calimala. In 1455 the guild ordered a second pax from another goldsmith, Matteo Dei. The subject of neither piece is known from the records. Two paxes with matching frames in the Bargello museum are thought to come from the baptistry, but their styles are considered too different to be by the same artist. One, of the
Coronation of the Virgin is generally thought superior in quality and assigned to Finiguerra. The other shows a
Crucifixion, and is often thought to be Dei's piece of 1456. The problem arises because Cellini praises a pax by Finiguerra with a
Crucifixion scene with horses, and Vasari praises one with scenes of the
Passion of Christ. Other surviving paxes are enlisted to match these descriptions, while still forming a group with a sufficiently consistent style. Some of the nielli have surviving sulphur casts, which might strengthen the association with Finiguerra. ==Legacy==