Researcher Valentina Salerno poses for photos next to the bust she identified as a work by Michelangelo Buonarroti, following a decade of archival research, at the basilica of Saint Agnes Outside the Walls in Rome on March 4.
16:46 JST, April 4, 2026
ROME (Reuters) — A marble bust that has stood for centuries in one of Rome’s basilicas has been reattributed to Michelangelo after nearly 200 years in obscurity, following a document-based investigation.
The sculpture, which depicts Christ the Saviour, has been preserved in the Basilica of Sant’Agnese fuori le mura on Rome’s ancient Via Nomentana by a Catholic religious order of canons regular.
Originally attributed to Michelangelo until the early 19th century, the work later lost its association with the Renaissance master and remained unnamed until the present day.
Italian independent researcher Valentina Salerno — a member of the Vatican committee for the celebrations marking the 500th anniversary of Michelangelo’s birth — has reattributed the sculpture to the Tuscan artist.
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Salerno’s research is based on long-term archival work rather than stylistic analysis alone, drawing on notarial records, posthumous inventories and indirect correspondence linked to Michelangelo’s final years in Rome.
“I am not an art historian — in fact, I don’t even have a university degree — but the strength of my research lies in its reliance on public archival documents,” she said, describing herself as something of an investigator.
The documents challenge the long-held narrative that Michelangelo, who lived until he was 88, systematically destroyed works late in life. Instead, the sources suggest that drawings, studies and some marble sculptures were carefully transferred within a trusted circle after the artist’s death.
“At Michelangelo’s death, every powerful ruler would have wanted to claim something of the master. But the artist carefully devised the transfer of the material in his possession so that his art could be passed on to his pupils and thus to future generations,” Salerno said.
One document refers to a locked room, accessible only with multiple keys, that had been created to safeguard valuable materials. While the room itself was later emptied, its contents can be traced through subsequent transfers.
The research outlines a discreet network through which unattributed works were moved to religious institutions and secondary storage sites, where they remained embedded in functional settings rather than entering the art market.
The Sant’Agnese bust appears to be part of this process. Long integrated into the basilica’s liturgical space, the sculpture was preserved in a building shaped by centuries of renovations and additions.
The data that have emerged will form the basis of a broader attribution process aimed at progressively returning other forgotten works to Michelangelo’s hand and presenting the findings to the international scholarly community.
The gleaming white sculpture now stands on an altar in a side chapel of the basilica and is protected by an alarm system.
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