Kindle Notes & Highlights
rt historians debate whether the art of Italy between 1200 and 1400 is the last phase of medieval art or the beginning of the rebirth, or Renaissance, of Greco-Roman naturalism. All agree,
however, the pivotal figure of this age was the Florentine painter Giotto di Bondone (ca. 1266–1337),
In contrast to the common practice of his day, Giotto based his method of pictorial expression
on observation of the natural world—the
inaugurating an age some scholars call “early scientific.”
He showed his generation a new way of seeing. With Giotto, Western painters turned away from the
spiritual world—the focus of medieval European artists—and once again moved resolutely toward th...
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condemned the art
of the late Middle Ages in northern Europe as “Gothic”
The son’s version
of the subject offers a striking contrast to his father’s thick carving and placid, almost stolid presentation of the religious narrative.
Giovanni arranged the figures loosely and dynamically.
The pope’s absence from Italy during much of the 14th century
contributed to an increase in prominence of monastic orders.
friars)—the Franciscans, founded by Francis of Assisi
(fig. 14-5), and the Dominicans, founded by the Spaniard Dominic de Guzman (ca. 1170–1221). These mendicants renounced all
worldly goods and committed themselves to spreading God’s word,
Confraternities, organizations consisting of laypersons who
dedicated themselves to strict religious observance,
The father worked in the classical tradition, the son
in a style derived from French Gothic. These styles were two of the
three most important ingredients in the formation of the distinctive and original art of 14th-century Italy.
The third major stylistic element in late medieval Italian art was the
Byzantine tradition (see
italian artists’ names
Many individuals were known by their place
of birth or adopted hometown.
Names were also impermanent and could be changed at
will.
Furthermore, Cimabue constructed
a deeper space for the Madonna and the surrounding figures to inhabit than was common in Byzantine art. The
Another significant development in 14th-century Italy was the
blossoming of a vernacular (commonly spoken) literature, which
dramatically affected Italy’s intellectual and cultural
renaissance huManisM The development of a vernacular literature was one important sign that the essentially religious view of the world dominating medieval Europe was about
to change dramatically in what historians call the Renaissance.
Cimabue, Madonna Enthroned with Angels and Prophets,
from Santa Trinità, Florence, ca. 1280–1290. Tempera and gold leaf
on wood, 12′ 7″× 7′ 4″. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence.
Regardless of the other influences on his artistic style, his true teacher was nature—the world of visible things.
Greece and Rome gave rise to the concept of the
“Middle Ages” as the era falling between antiquity and the Renaissance.
Fundamental to the development of the Italian Renaissanc...
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Humanism was more a code of civil conduct, a
theory of education, and a scholarly discipline than a philosophical
system. As their name suggests, Italian humanists were concerned
chiefly with human values and interests as disti...
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model primarily of human
focus derived not from an authoritative and traditional religious
dogma but from reason.
Ideally, humanists sought no material reward for services rendered. The sole reward for heroes of civic virtue was fame, just as
the reward for leaders of the holy life was sainthood.
The humanist cult of fame emphasized the
importance of creative individuals and their role in contributing to
the renown o...
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Critics from Giorgio Vasari
†
to the present day have regarded Giotto di Bondone (fig. 14-1) as the...
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Giotto di Bondone, Madonna Enthroned, from the Church
of Ognissanti, Florence, ca. 1310. Tempera and gold leaf on wood,
10′ 8″× 6′ ...
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Giotto displaced the Byzantine style in Italian painting and revived
classical naturalism. His figures have substance, dimensionality, and bulk,
and gi...
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bulk—qualities suppressed in favor of a spiritual immateriality in Byzantine and Italo-Byzantine art.
Among 14th-century Italian city-states, the Republics of Siena
and Florence were the most powerful.
The patron contracting for the artist’s services
could be a civic group, religious entity, private individual, or even
the artists’ guild itself.
Guilds, although primarily business organizations, contributed to their city’s religious and artistic life by
subsidizing the building and decoration of numerous churches and
hospitals. For example, the wool manufacturers’ guild oversaw the
start of Florence Cathedral (figs. 14-18 and 14-18a) in 1296, and
the wool merchants’ guild supervised the completion of its dome
Monastic orders, confraternities, and the popes were also major art patrons. In addition, wealthy families and individuals—for
example, the Paduan banker Enrico Scrovegni (fig. 14-1)—co...
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Patrons normally
asked artists to submit drawings or models for approval, and they
expected the artists they hired to adhere...
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If the said panel is not beautifully painted and it
is not embellished according to the wishes and desires of the same
lessors, they are in no way bound to pay him the price or any part
of it.
†
Sometimes patrons furnished the materials and paid artists by
the day instead of a fixed amount. That was the arrangement Duccio made on October 9, 1308, when he agreed to paint the Maestà
(fig. 14-9) for the high altar of Siena Cathedral.
Duccio has promised to paint and make the said panel as well as he
can and knows how, and he further agreed not to accept or receive
any other work u...
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to pay the said Duccio sixteen solidi of
the Sienese denari as his salary for the said wor...
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Many of Duccio’s panels are on display today as
single masterpieces, scattered among the world’s museums.
from Byzantine tradition. But the artist relaxed the
strict frontality and rigidity of the figures.
This is a feature familiar in French
Gothic works (fig. 13-37) and is a mark of the artistic dialogue between Italy and nor...
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The works of Duccio di Buoninsegna (active ca.
1278–1318) represent Sienese a...
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The Sienese believed the Virgin had brought them victory over the
Florentines at the battle of Monteperti in 1260, and she was the focus
...
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So great was Duccio’s stature that church officials
permitted him to include his name in the dedicatory inscription on
the front of the...
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Duccio consistently dressed Jesus in blue robes in most of the
panels, but beginning with Transfiguration, he gilded the Savior’s
garment.
Duccio carefully differentiated among
the anger of Peter, the malice of Judas (echoed in the faces of the
throng about Jesus), and the apprehension and timidity of the fleeing disciples. These figures are actors in a religious drama the artist
interpreted in terms of thoroughly human actions and reactions. In
this and the other narrative panels, for example, Jesus’ Entry into
Jerusalem (fig. 14-10a), a theme treated also by Giotto in the Arena
Chapel (fig. 14-8a), Duccio took a decisive step toward the humanization of religious subject matter.
Duccio thus recognized how the function of the altarpiece naturally limited experimentation in depicting narrative
action and producing illusionistic effects (such as Giotto’s) by modeling forms and adjusting their placement in pictorial space.
In the 13th and 14th
centuries, Italy was the distribution center for the great silk trade
from China and the Middle East.
People throughout Europe (Duccio and other artists among them) prized fabrics from
China, Persia, Byzantium, and the Islamic world. In Maestà, Duccio created the glistening and shimmering effects of textiles, ada...
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In this dramatic depiction of Judas’s betrayal of
Jesus, the actors display a variety of individual
emotions. Duccio here took a decisive step toward
the humanization of religious subject matter.