Tuesday, 31 July 2018

Looking at Pictures: parts 1 and 2




Part 1



The title of this article was suggested by a short book of the same name by Sir Kenneth (later Lord) Clark (my edition:1972). I read that book when I was still quite young and, at the time, the title struck me as odd: what did Kenneth Clark mean by ‘looking at pictures’? - surely that activity is self-explanatory!



Now four or so decades later, I not only believe I understand the title, and it’s subtlety (perhaps “How to look at Pictures” might have been a too pedantic one), but share, and have done for some time, a belief in the need for such didactic enterprises. This because it is my observation while walking through different galleries in different parts of the world, that an extraordinary number of people have not the foggiest notion of what they are doing there - or, should be doing there!1

During a recent sojourn in Florence, I visited the galleries of the Uffizi several times. These days (2018) the place is literally packed with tourists, with football match-like crowds waiting to get in, more or less from opening to closing. When I first visited Italy, and Florence, there was still a ‘tourist season’, roughly from mid-Spring to mid-Autumn, with the Summer months being the height. In recent times, this ‘season’ has almost ceased to exist, there being thousands upon thousands of tourists pretty much year-round. Nevertheless, the summer months would still seem to be the most crowded, a time of the year, ironically, when Italy generally, and medieval cities like Florence especially, become almost unbearable because of the heat. In fact, like the Romans, the Florentines in August desert their town for either the seaside or the mountains.

What are all these hundreds of thousands, not to say millions, of tourists each year doing in the Uffizi? They are fed in at the ‘beginning’, at the 13th century, and come out at the ‘end’, that is, the 19th century or early 20th, two, three or even four hours later; for most, a once-in-a-lifetime visit, they are usually exhausted, overwhelmed and often frustrated. As opposed to the obligatory Botticellis and Leonardos, even those few pictures they were actually personally stimulated by were only truly, if briefly, visible if there had been a fortuitous gap in the literally never-ending stream - no, river - of ‘art lovers’ flowing through. 

By contrast, even though I might be in Florence for only a week, I will go to the Uffizi several times, probably quite late in the day, there being usually far fewer people around, and spend at most an hour looking at one or two pieces, as well as saying a quick “hello” to some old favourites on the way through to the exit. In that hour, often quite undisturbed by anyone, let alone by crowds, I am able to ‘study’ my pictures up close, from afar, from different angles; to take (nowadays) one or two photos - including of the painting’s explanatory label - before continuing to immerse myself ever deeper into that particular picture’s delights. Although I would very much like to be able to spend more time in the gallery, in fact, anything more than an hour or an hour and a half becomes a strain on my ability to comprehend, to take in the physical object(s) I might be looking at, not to mention to recall what I’ve seen.

What is the point of this? The point is, that for anyone doing anything more than just ‘looking’, that is to say, who is bringing a critical (in the best sense) analytical eye - and therefore brain - to the activity, a well-spent hour or so is more than enough for one visit. The concept of ‘doing’ the Uffizi - if by this we mean attempting to take it all in, in one visit - (or the National Gallery in London for example, or the Met in New York) is absurd: great and even minor galleries will ‘do’ you before you ‘do’ them. The concept is an intellectual and physical impossibility: it may be possible to 'see' most of the art work in the public viewing spaces at the Uffizi in a visit lasting several hours - not so the Louvre or the Met - but such a visit will result in a completely befuddled recollection of some things, and little or no recollection of most.

Looking at pictures - and art work in general - requires time and knowledge. If you have only one of these two things, your experience will be extremely diminished. Perhaps the more important is knowledge because, with the appropriate knowledge, even a short time spent before a chosen work will be of benefit. Unfortunately, too many of us and I think the majority, while perhaps having enough time, have little or no knowledge.

I recall admiring Japanese tourists who, almost to a man - and particularly, to a woman - came to galleries and other sites equipped with an excellent guide book which very often they had already read but had seen fit to bring with them, to consult while standing in front of painting, sculpture, monument or piazza 'x'. They were admirable in that they had realized that they did not 'know' and had therefore taken steps to find out! Too often, many visitors to art galleries simply assume that, since they are looking at images of people, animals, landscapes, interiors, etc., which they can recognize from their personal experience of life, that they can - and do - 'understand' the image they are looking at. Needless to say, this approach instantly fails them when confronted with anything deemed to be 'abstract'.

Of course, if all we are talking about is an image of a man on a horse, riding across a sunny field, there may not be any more to the  putative 'subject' of the painting than that; and, as far as 'understanding' the subject of the image goes, they have no more difficulty than the expert does. But what about why the artist painted that scene in that way, what does the average viewer understand about that? Actually, precious little! If one asked why Rembrandt painted a country scene in a particular way, Corot in another, and Monet and Mondrian in yet others, what answer would the average person be able to give? Unless that person had studied some art history, and, in particular, the history of western landscape painting, the average member of a massive crowd, shuffling through a major gallery such as the Uffizi (this type of tourist does not visit smaller or minor galleries as a rule) would be quite unable to give any answer at all!

So, let's have a look at what we might do when visiting a gallery to see one, two, three - at most four - pictures which we are interested in. Before even getting on the bus or train to go to the gallery in question, we will have have read-up on these two or three pictures (or other art works), and on the artists who made them. We should know the date of birth, and death, of our artists as that little bit of information helps us place him or her in some kind of historical context. An artist alive in 1540 for instance lived therefore at the same time Michelangelo was alive (1475-1564). Michelangelo's influence was profound in Italy - and later throughout Europe - and as a result, it may be possible to discern some Michelangelo-like traits or qualities in the work of our selected artist; maybe not! However, whether or not directly or indirectly influenced by the work of Michelangelo, especially in Italy, it would have been almost impossible to have been unaware of him. Recognizing influences in artists' work helps us to interpret what they were trying to do and why. If we also know that by the year 1540, Florentine Mannerism had fully flowered, and that that style was directly influenced by Michelangelo's production in painting, we might then, for example, be in a position to make some comments on the proximity or otherwise of the work in question to Florentine art in general, and Mannerism in particular. And so, with this  kind of information, we can begin to understand why a given piece looks the way it does.

Such awareness may at first seem more the realm of the specialist, and, I think, in an objective sense it probably is. However, once we start to look into the 'whys and wherefores' of any given art work, be it painting, sculpture, architecture, literature or music, we will very quickly find ourselves discovering more and more of that kind of detail, that kind of information. In other words, we are no longer as it were, trapped in our 21st century but rather, oddly, we find ourselves capable of a sort of 'time travel': the more we want to know about a given art work, the more we are encouraged to enter the cultural-historical ambience of that piece, and of its creator, until, finally, we are to some extent able to 'read' art in its own terms (its specific language) - unencumbered neither by our position in time nor by our lack of knowledge! 

As an example of the above-mentioned 'time travel' let's compare two masterpieces of Italian sculpture, Michelangelo's David and Bernini's version of the same subject 2. To begin, we need to be in Florence to see the David of Michelangelo, the city in and for which it was made. On the other hand, to see Bernini's David, we need to go to Rome, the city in which it was made. I point this out because, at the times of the creation of both of these Davids, both cities were independent city-states, Italy as a modern political entity did not exist, and, in fact, there had been a proxy war between Rome - controlled by the Popes - and Florence 3. These facts, seemingly political and apparently not directly art related, actually had a fundamentally important, far from extraneous relevance to the subjects and methods of many artists working at those times.


David, by Michelangelo, 1501-1504, marble; height 5 metres without base
Accademia delle Belle Arti, Florence

Michelangelo's David was made from a block of marble on which some work had already been done (1463) by another artist before Michelangelo took over. The sculpted figure was  originally intended as a decoration, high up on the roof-line of the then under construction Duomo, or cathedral, of Florence. The stone is massive and therefore would have been reasonably visible in its intended position, some 40 metres above ground. When the 29 year-old Michelangelo finished his work, the city decided that it was of such power that it should stand as a symbol of the independently-minded (like David himself) Florence of the time - a powerful but often challenged city-state - outside its town hall, the  Palazzo della Signoria, or Palazzo Vecchio as it is now known. 

When we visit this remarkable work in its present home of the Accademia in Florence, we discover that the statue has really only one completely satisfying point of view and that is more or less from directly in front (although the back is startling in its rendering of physical reality); we might also notice that the head and neck seem a little large compared with the body, the sides are too thin and that the legs are a little over-long. These 'curiosities' may be explained by two already mentioned circumstances: first, that the stone was not a pristine block, and secondly, that the image was conceived with the understanding that it was to be seen from 40 metres below, at ground level looking up! The way we approach this great figure today is at ground level, and, although it is standing on a quite high plinth, we are certainly not viewing it with craned necks! 

These facts also suggest that, essentially, David was meant to be seen from one viewpoint and not to be walked around as can be done today. This quality of a carefully chosen single vantage point is distinct from the 360 degree viewing possible in the work of other artists in other times. In fact, many many Florentine sculptures are designed to be set-up in a niche on a building, usually a church, therefore limiting very definitely our view. When we see such works standing in galleries today, frequently we are looking at them in a way never intended by either the artist, or by his or her patron. This is important especially for viewers coming from 'new world' countries where their older galleries are full of European work, both paintings and sculpture, which are consequently completely out of their original context, a context which moreover usually influenced quite a lot of the 'formal' content of the given work, especially for instance, the light.


David, by Gianlorezo Bernini,1623, marble, life-size
Galleria Borghese, Rome

Michelangelo was 29 years old when he completed his David in 1504 (begun 1501). Bernini (1598-1680) was 25 when he made his David, amongst other pieces, for the very rich cardinal Scipione Borghese. Bernini's David was always meant to be seen at, so to speak, point blank range, that is, at natural eye level. It is still in the house, a Roman Baroque palace, for which it was made. The differences between this and Michelangelo's version of the same subject are many but perhaps the most obvious is the position and pose of the two protagonists. Michelangelo's David is static but clearly ready for action; he is seen in steady repose, his weight resting on his right leg. While the angle through his shoulders is upwards from his right shoulder to his left, that of his hips is (naturally) the opposite, that is downwards from his right hip to his left; his left, non weight-bearing leg is coming gently forward from the plane of the torso.

Bernini's David on the other hand (some 119 years later, in a historical period known as the Counter Reformation, in the contemporary centre of the art world, Pontifical Rome), sweeps into or, is about to sweep into our space. He is not waiting to spring into action, sling at the ready but strung loosely, this David is actually caught in mid-flight as it were, at the precise moment when he is about to let fly the fatal stone; his sling is tense with potential force, so too are his arms in particular but also his twisted torso and his bent and straight legs. In other words, his whole body, including the contorted face, are involved in violent and powerful action. Here we are not invited to contemplate the heroic, forceful but passive David, rather almost to 'get out of the way' of this action already occurring!

Bernini's David is a sculpture 'in the round', that is, we can and should walk all around this great figure, to be able to see the kinetic energy in the process of being summoned and released through all the muscles of his body: his back, legs, hips, his torso and his arms. Whereas Michelangelo's David's hands are beautiful (one a reconstruction after being damaged), the right  is clearly at rest while the left, also motionless, has a firm grasp of the sling (visible from the back) held across his shoulder, those of Bernini are essentially involved in the carrying-out of the action. Where the Florentine David is composed, resolute, untroubled but static, the Roman is dynamic, pushing into our space and thereby making it his space as well, and us not only spectators or observers, but quasi participants in this crucial event. 

I might mention here the differences in the faces of these two wonderful works. The David of Florence has an alert expression with some displeasure we could say, shown by the wrinkled brow but, otherwise, a contained but ready and determined countenance. He appears to be contemplating his next step or the required reaction to some stimulus. What we can contemplate are his thoughts; naturally, we cannot do this literally but we are invited to do so, as apart from his splendid physique, there is no dynamic action to see. The Roman David by contrast, needs no interpretation, we are not invited to divine his intellectual procedure, quite the contrary: this David, howsoever intellectual may have been his reasoning to get to this juncture, has already gone past the point of no return, and we catch him, stumble into his action almost, at exactly the point where his cogitations have turned from abstract to concrete and dynamic reality! Here David's face shows us grim determination translated into physical actuality; one might say it is not diagnosis or prognosis but radical treatment!

In terms of things to know about these two works, there is much more that could be said about both and, in particular, about the artistic climates of the two cities at the times when the sculptures were made. For example, Renaissance Humanism and a return to classical artistic models was in full swing in the Florence of Michelangelo, even if he later went far beyond this initial stimulus. Bernini's Rome was fighting back against protestant movements across Europe and in fact, was only recently recovered from a devastating sack some 100 years or so before; the Papacy itself both as a spiritual and a temporal power was under threat. Classical models were still the norm but had been mastered well before Bernini came on the scene; indeed, the model to absorb and overcome was now Michelangelo himself, particularly in architecture! 

I'm sure that even so far, there is probably too much information for the casual visitor to keep in his or her head when visiting the Uffizi or the Accademia in Florence, or the Villa Borghese in Rome; my point is that, knowing these kinds of things surely adds to the appreciation of works of art in general, and whatever may be the specific ones we are looking at in particular.



1 When I say 'should be doing there' I do not in any way mean that there is a right or wrong way to enjoy looking at art; I simply mean that a lot of people find themselves in a place such as the Uffizi and, being quite unused to doing such things as looking at pictures in art galleries, are consequently ill at ease and confused about how to do what they are doing. For many international tourists, a visit to a place like the Uffizi is in fact the very first time they have been inside a major art gallery!


2 Please see my article in this blog: Michelangelo and Bernini: David for a more detailed analysis of the two sculptures and, in particular, of Bernini's.

3 The Siege of Florence, 1529-30, one of many such 'wars' on the Italian peninsula, due to whether or not a particular city supported the power of the Pope as opposed to the power of the Holy Roman Emperor, Carlo V, with the French king enthusiastically involved here and there.

Part 2

Let's now turn to a couple of paintings, to compare them and so to 'look' into them in some detail.



The first we shall consider is a small panel picture, one of many from the rear of a landmark painting, the Maestà, painted by Duccio di Buoninsegna (known to art history simply as Duccio) between 1308 and 1311 for the high altar of the cathedral of Siena. Our example is situated in the predella or base of the huge altarpiece which measured originally 468 H by 499 W cm (White 1)


The Marriage Feast at Cana by Duccio. Tempera on wood.
approx 47x50cm Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Siena

About Duccio himself relatively little is known and for a long while he was  relegated to the second rank of Sienese painters and even forgotten altogether. These days however, to enter the wonderful Museo dell'Opera in Siena is to enter an almost enchanted world within which Duccio's Maestà is only one of many fantastic objects. We do know that he was born in 1255 and died in 1319, and that the contract for this magnum opus was signed in 1308.

First, we can observe that it is a painting still influenced by some Byzantine conventions, so much so that the figure of Christ in the centre-left of the image could be substituted almost intact for a Christ Pantocrator from somewhere like Monreale in Sicily, for example 2. But, its iconographical lineage aside, what can we actually see? 



Christ Pantocrator, mosaic, apse of the cathedral of Monreale
Palermo, Sicily 

A room into which we are looking more or less from directly in front; this is important because the artist has virtually emphasised this in his perspective construction of the coffered ceiling of the room. The joists supporting this ceiling are drawn in 'correct' perspective provided we are standing in that position. This is interesting because artistic perspective was not fully understood until approximately the middle of the following century (Brunelleschi, Alberti, etc.) but here it is clear that Duccio, amongst others, had some idea of how a 'realistic' rendering of space should look. However, that said, other elements of the scene do not follow the indications of the ceiling, its coffers and its beams.

The dining table in a manner Cézannesque, is tilted at an impossible angle if we accept that the ceiling is indicative of the theoretical point of view of the observer; it is so tilted up however, at least partly, so that we can see what is on the table. In the story of the wedding at Cana, the fact that it was a wedding feast is important and so is the fact that people were drinking wine: note the several glasses of wine on the table, as well as the servants in the lower left corner, busied in preparing even more. Nevertheless, in spite of the table having been tilted upwards, it too does show some knowledge of perspective as, in the plane of the table-top, the side edges do in fact recede to a common vanishing point, although not the same one as in the ceiling! The same may be observed about the small table in the lower left corner: it too is tilted upwards, implying, as does the main table-top, that we are looking down onto it.

And yet, the servants working around and behind the little table - like the guests at the main table - are shown as though we were looking straight at them, not as though we were looking at them from above. In addition, the angle of the small table-top is different from that of the main table! But the most contradictory element - compared with the point of view we have of the ceiling - is the terracotta floor tiles, all of which are shown as though they were a vertical pattern on a vertical plane. This is a particularly odd feature as Duccio has gone to a lot of trouble to show, quite convincingly at this time, the pattern of the cloth on the dining table; here he seems to understand planar recession in space but ignores it as far as the floor is concerned.

Another aspect of Duccio's creation of space is the overlapping of the various elements in the scene in such a way as to suggest depth within the picture plane. The servants are in front of the dining table which is in front of the diners, and they are in front of the rear wall of the room. To further extend his space, the artist has opened an arched doorway in that wall, between Mary and her Son, through which can be seen further rooms. Interestingly, the 'gothic' arch of that opening links the heads of the two principal protagonists.

Leaving aside the perspective drawing, let's now consider some of the narrative content. One of the principal signifiers in religious art of this period, as of others, is the human hand. Hand gestures and positions were critical signs and symbols in the interpretation of images, and not only in western art. Three of the main actors in this scene are using hand gestures to indicate their intentions and to make them plain to us; the first is the figure who appears to be the majordomo, situated just below Mary and wearing a pale cap, who seems to be addressing himself to one of the only two personages at the feast table who do not have haloes - more than likely, the younger man to Christ's left. Given that we know the story, it is reasonable to assume that he is telling the host that they are out of wine.

The host has his hand seemingly directed back towards his chest as if to say: "What am I to do?". At this point, the story shifts to Mary, Christ's mother, seated at the left end of the table; she in turn could be interpreted as drawing Christ's attention to this fact, that the wedding party has run out of wine. He could be seen as either agreeing to work His first miracle - that of turning water into wine - or as protesting that His time had not yet come (to begin his ministry). Nevertheless, referring again to the scene in the lower left corner, it appears that a clear liquid (water) is being poured from a wooden casket into one of the large receptacles on the small table; however, the servant on the right, refilling his jug, finds that the water has changed to wine. It's as though the miracle were happening right before our eyes!

A final point which concerns the servants in the foreground, one holding a jar (note his back is on the exact vertical middle line of the composition), the other a glass: this latter is walking to stage right but his torso is turned back towards the servant holding the jar. This is a curious example of 'contrapposto' in an image where everyone else is shown in a more or less conventional pose; Duccio has, in this figure, introduced a playful piece of realistic narrative, albeit  (acceptably) in a minor character. Incidentally, it should be noted that these figures, like the others and the tables, cast no shadows! The (smaller) minor characters in pictures, like the servants here, allowed artists some scope to realize mundane and realistic incidents which were otherwise strictly prohibited as far as the (larger) main, and particularly religious, figures were concerned.

We shall now leave Duccio for a minute and move ahead in time to 1447 in Florence.

The place we are visiting is called the Cenacolo of Sant'Apollonia, situated in a monastery in the heart of the city 3. It contains one of several Last Suppers still to be found in Florence and is, to my mind, one of the most impressive. It was painted by Andrea di Bartolo, known to art history as Andrea del Castagno; he was born around 1419 and died of plague in 1457.


A view of the entire wall containing the Last Supper with above, scenes from the Passion of Christ,
and, on the left wall a Crucifixion, all by Andrea del Castagno. Fresco.

The first thing which we might notice here, apart from the vastly different scale (all the figures are larger than life-size), is the resolution of the perspective problems which we had noted in Duccio's beautiful picture. By this time in Florence, 1447, perspective had in effect been mastered, or re-mastered, after having been lost since Roman times. Andrea's image is also situated in a room, with a dining table as the main locus of activity.


Detail of the Last Supper by Andrea del Castagno.
Cenacolo di Sant'Apollonia, Florence.

A close-up look at the first photo shows how far the 'realistic' rendering of a given space had come since Duccio's time. The ceiling, side walls and floor all work together to convince us that we are looking into a 'real' space. Standing in front of this enormous fresco, one can't help but be overwhelmed by its spatial integrity, its size and its power. We are captivated by the almost trompe l'oeil effect created by the masterful use of this new tool, perspective.

Very differently from in the Duccio, the dining table in Andrea's painting is seen only from one side, precisely as we would see it had we been standing in that fateful room, observing that sad occasion. The top of this table is not visible to us although the objects on it can be seen; glass bottles or carafes, glasses and pieces of bread are all there, but this time shown as they would appear, given our single vantage point. In this painting as well, there is a psychological element virtually wholly absent in the Duccio panel: the artist here has indicated and reinforced the shock and dismay of the diners by means of the extraordinary marble fascia stones lining the wall behind them.

The most forceful and dramatic of these marbles is that behind Christ, but it is also behind the chief of the Apostles, Peter, behind the favourite, John, and opposite the ill-fated Judas, the only figure on our side of the long white horizontal which is the table cloth. In other words, in a masterly display of composition, Andrea has focused our attention, with the aid of 'abstract' colour, on the critical moment, that of Christ's discovery of His imminent betrayal 4. It is almost as if there are ferocious demons hidden in that frenzied abstract marble, screaming their bile. The hapless Judas is the only Apostle dressed entirely in dark colours, he has a noticeably dark complexion and is clearly the 'odd man out'; notwithstanding these markers, he has still lifted his right hand, expressing his shock at this revelation.

As in perhaps the most famous Last Supper, that of Leonardo da Vinci, all the Apostles display their emotions in different ways, using their bodies and their hands, together with facial expressions, to give some indication of a mental state. This mode of expression, through hand gestures, was not merely a convention at this time, it was rather a recommended practice, in particular by Leon Battista Alberti, one of the greatest Renaissance art theoreticians and architects, who wrote several very influential books, especially about perspective in painting. In his treatise on painting, he strongly counsels the use of gestures to indicate the mental attitude or state ('the movements of the soul') of the protagonists in pictures 5.

For our purposes here however, it's enough to be aware of this enormous leap in the 'realistic' representation of space (sometimes referred to as 'fictive' space when we mean the illusion of a given space in a picture or work of sculpture). What is also important to realize is that, for a very long time, between the decline of the western Roman empire and the advent of the Renaissance, imitation of physical reality was not the aim of art, nor was it of primary importance, and especially not in religious art. Byzantine art, which held sway in the Mediterranean world during those intermediate centuries, used physical reality as a vehicle with which to communicate the dogma of the Church; the actual 'facts' of our ordinary, terrestrial existence were almost irrelevant as we were directed to concentrate our thoughts on the 'divine' world of the beings portrayed or, better, symbolized in images. Hence, it is possible for a Duccio and many like him, to tilt a table top so that we can see what's on it, and still not disturb the essential message of the given image, even though that table top 'contradicts' another element in the same picture.






1 John White, Tuscan Art and the Medieval Workshop - Duccio, p 80. Thames and Hudson, 1979

2 Note amongst other things, the position of the blue cloak in both the Monreale Pantocrator and the Duccio Christ, especially the abstract shape formed by its wrapping around the body of the Saviour.

3 'Cenacolo' means basically a common dining-room or refectory, especially one in a monastery or convent. The subject of the Last Supper of Christ was therefore thought a suitable one for such a place as it would encourage the diners to reflect on that significant event; especially so, when we recall that many monasteries housed silent orders of monks or nuns, and so speaking or chatting was not permitted. As mentioned, there are several such murals in Florence alone and, to my mind, as such, is a very worthy 'theme' for a tour of that city.

4 For some modern viewers, like myself, Andrea del Castagno's fantastic Last Supper would exist equally well without any of the diners at the table! The construction of that fictive room is so extraordinary, and, without its figures, so 'abstract', that, to my mind, it is complete in a 'Modernist' sense as is. 

5 Leon Battista Alberti, 1404-1472, born in Genova to a Florentine father, who, like Dante, suffered exile from his native city; Alberti himself, unlike Dante, was eventually able to return. Two of his notable and highly important books are:
'Della pittura' (On Painting; in Italian, 1435-36, later 1439-41 [L. Bertolini] in Latin) and 'De re aedificatoria' (Concerning Building, 1450 or 1452?).












Monday, 18 September 2017

A review of similarities and differences in representations of the Resurrection of Christ with regard to that by Piero della Francesca at Sansepolcro


This article concerns various representations of the Resurrection of Christ as exemplified by the accompanying photos, all of which were taken by me using a phone-camera. Since becoming involved with possibly the most enigmatic example, that of Piero della Francesca (c.1412-1492) in Sansepolcro, I have been noticing other artists' versions in the museums and churches I visit on my travels. These other interpretations, all restricted more or less by the accepted iconography of the subject, do however vary quite a lot, while one or two have clear similarities to Piero's icon.

Before proceeding, a short history of the iconography of the Resurrection might be helpful. In early Christianity, the Resurrection event, which is not described as such in the New Testament, was represented by symbols indicative of the victory of Christ over death (and sin): the first two letters of the originally Greek word 'Christ' in Greek are: Χ and Ρ (chi and rho). These were shown, superimposed such as one might still see in churches today, above a simple Cross and surrounded by a wreath. Later images included the two or three Marys at the tomb, engaged in conversation with an angel who was often seated on a non-Biblical Roman sarcophagus - Christ having been buried in a tomb excavated in the rock; others showed Mary Magdalen talking to the Risen Christ whom she had mistaken for a gardener; sometimes the soldiers, sleeping or not, were included, but not Christ himself. The inclusion of Christ, especially as the central main focus, began seemingly, in Italy, sometime in the 1300s. A final observation concerns the 'tomb' itself: in the Biblical account, Christ was laid to rest in a tomb supplied by a rich man, a Hebrew tomb in Palestine of that period, meaning a hole in a rock, sealed with a large stone. This is significant because the images we normally see do not show a rock tomb, but a Roman-style sarcophagus; indeed, occasionally, both a sarcophagus and a rock tomb are represented! In the image below, Piero has adhered to the contemporary iconography in which there is a Roman-style sarcophagus and no sign at all of a rock (actually a rock wall) with a large hole in it. (1and Note)



Resurrection by Piero della Francesca, fresco (after 1458?, c.1469 according to Longhi 2) in Sansepolcro
(normally, the word 'fresco' is used to describe the technique which Piero used here, but the recent restoration work has shown that, in fact, a considerable portion of this masterwork was not done in 'buon fresco', that is, it was done in 'fresco a secco'. See Note below)


The article will proceed in a kind of ad hoc fashion, that is to say, not in a chronological sequence of examples, so, to begin, let's look at two sculptural versions, produced roughly 150 years apart. The first is, to my mind at least, a surprisingly modern-looking work, and forms the central panel on the front of a sarcophagus (that is, a sarcophagus on a sarcophagus), now in the Museum at Santa Croce in Florence. The work of a wonderfully robust sculptor called Tino da Camaino, it is a marble sculpture in, let's say, low relief with high relief elements. As can be seen from the photo, it bears an uncanny resemblance to Piero's painting, with Christ smack in the middle, his right leg up on the front edge of his sarcophagus (Piero's Christ has his left leg up); in his right hand he holds his victory flag, and in his left, unlike Piero's, he holds a book. Like Piero's Christ, he looks directly ahead of himself, in a way through us and over us. Although the sarcophagus is clearly different in the two works, the inclusion of the sleeping soldiers, who occupy the entire foreground of these powerful statements, is similar in both; perhaps not easy to appreciate at first glance, there are actually three men shown here, in Tino's relief, only one of whom is more or less fully visible: his two companions are indicated by torsos and heads! But these crammed-in, sleeping men are almost Modernist in their necessary synthesis; large, clean forms, conveying both weight and mass, similar in some ways to the work of Jacopo della Quercia. Horizontal deep sleep contrasting with vertical hyper- alertness!



Resurrection by Tino da Camaino, marble sarcophagus (c.1318-19), Museum, Santa Croce, Florence

The next piece is a masterwork by the Florentine sculptor, Donatello; it too is the central panel, this time on one of the sides of one of two bronze pulpits he made for the beautiful church of San Lorenzo, also in Florence. The odd thing about these pulpits is that they bear little or no similarity to the usual rotund form of pulpits, but look rather more like sarcophagi (possibly because Donatello studied ancient Roman examples). These panels however are in bronze and so visually operate differently from Tino's stone work, and from Roman examples: they depend for a start on the reflections of light bouncing around on the polished bronze which had elements finished in gold and silver as well. 

Here there are several deviations from the usual iconography: to begin with, the figure of Christ is not in the centre of Donatello's composition, but radically to the left side; he has his left foot up on the sarcophagus, he carries the flag of victory but, very unusually, is still wearing the winding sheets in which he was buried. And this Christ is not looking in our direction at all, he appears to be looking at some future known only to himself, and from which we, at present, are excluded. In this image, we still have the sleeping guards, dressed in their finest armour 'da parata', that is, parade armour; they are obviously deeply asleep and Christ is very much alone -  and like Tino's, alert! Here again, the sleeping soldiers occupy the entire foreground with our point of view, uncommonly, being from below (note the underside of the lid of the sarcophagus; in fact, in the church, we do look up at these pulpits). But, because Donatello has placed his Risen Christ so far to the left, he has, uniquely, filled the background with a double-arch architectural setting; this is reminiscent of his Siena baptismal font relief, The Feast of Herod. Donatello loved to create deep space with the use of the then newly-rediscovered perspective but, in this particular image, there being no iconographical motive to include architecture at all, he has been quite restrained. This work, as with much of Donatello, is surprisingly rough close to, and, as such, again reminds us of Modernist 'truth to materials', this roughness revealing the fact that the original for this bronze was, of course, made in clay.


The Resurrection by Donatello, bronze pulpit (1460-67) in San Lorenzo, Florence


The next image we might look at is a small painted panel which is part of a much larger painted wooden Crucifix, in the Duomo, or cathedral, of Pistoia. It was painted by Coppo di Marcovaldo in about 1274; at this time, such large painted wooden crosses - three metres or more - were to be found in many churches, at least in Tuscany: we also have examples by Cimabue and Giotto. But our interest is in the beautiful, elegant and refined Medieval representation of the Resurrection. It predates Tino's sculpture by about 44 years and the iconography is also older. In fact, in this image, there is no Risen Christ, instead what we see is the Biblical angel, seated on the edge of the non-Biblical sarcophagus, with its lid askew and the winding cloth still visible inside; it is unclear whether this image is meant to suggest that the sarcophagus is within a rock, or standing in front of a rock or hill. The angel is there to inform the three Marys, on the left, that the one they are searching for has risen, that they will not find Him there any longer.

One thing immediately strikes us, apart from the important absence of any Christ figure, and that is the Medieval, not to say Byzantine, representation of the 'landscape' features: both the rocky hill (or rock-tomb) in the background (?), and the stretch of ground in front (?) of the sarcophagus are treated in exactly the same way, and with the same tones in the colours. There is virtually no attempt to convey the idea or, better, the 'reality' of a real, tangible place: what we have here is rather, an 'idea' used to convey the notion of 'outdoors' as opposed to 'indoors'. The three 'objects' are related in space by being placed one in front of the other: the stretch of ground (?) is placed in front of the sarcophagus, and that in turn is placed in front of the large hill - or protruding from the cave of the rock. Note also that the angel, being a heavenly messenger, is somewhat larger than the earthly Marys. But the most important difference is in the iconography itself: we know that Christ has risen but He is nowhere to be seen. This version of the event, without Christ standing at or floating above (see below) his tomb, is the more strictly correct one, in terms of what is retold in the New Testament. And, further, there are no sleeping soldiers!


The Marys at the Tomb by Coppo di Marcovaldo, 
one panel from a large wooden Crucifix (1274) in the Duomo of Pistoia


The next example (below) is a very large fresco, painted on the ceiling of the large Spanish Chapel, at Santa Maria Novella, in Florence. It was painted after both Coppo's panel and Tino's sculpture. The entire wall surface, and the ceiling of this chapel, are covered in beautiful and (at least some) socio-historically interesting frescos - this because they show certain historical figures and an image of the cathedral of Florence, before Brunelleschi's dome had been built. What is of immediate interest though is the representation of the Resurrection as, in this case, we have an example of both the older and the newer iconography in the one painting.

Andrea di Bonaiuto has included a number of different events in the one large image, although it is obvious that each occurred at a different time. But, from the point of view of this article, his inclusion of both the Biblical story and the later iconography, of Christ rising out of his tomb, with all their attendant details, is most unusual. Let's have a look at them: on the extreme left we see a symbol of a city, probably Jerusalem, out from which seem to have come the three Marys who now appear to be in conversation with one of two angels seated on the sarcophagus. On the right, we have the later scene where Mary Magdalen encounters someone who looks like the gardener but is in fact the Risen Christ. Returning to the central scene, with the two angels on the sarcophagus, we have the traditional Biblical ingredients, minus the rock tomb; however, above and below - or, in front of - the sarcophagus, we also have respectively, the Risen Christ (shown as it were, floating above) and the sleeping soldiers: this later iconography being seamlessly melded with the earlier one. 

Incidentally, in Andrea's fresco, there are six sleeping guards, a couple of whom are dressed in oriental style, that is, not Roman; on at least one shield are inscribed the letters of the Roman republic: SPQR. The figure of Christ is shown as suspended somewhat above the main action, encircled by an aureola(e), or 'mandorla', of divine glory or grace; he is a sublime figure, clothed entirely in brilliant white, and is clearly meant to be seen as such. We might mention here as well, the not-casual representation of the background landscape, 'framing' as it does the main event, scattered with symbols of trees (not portraits of individual real trees) and even another city in the top right. This landscape is interesting as it is in some elements echoed in the Piero della Francesca version.



Scenes of the Resurrection by Andrea di Bonaiuto (also known as Andrea da Firenze), 1365-67, fresco
The Spanish Chapel, Santa Maria Novella, Florence

The next two paintings are included here precisely because they do have clear concordances with the image at Sanseplocro by Piero della Francesca. The first is by a wonderful Renaissance painter called Andrea del Castagno (1421-1457) and the second is by an anonymous Florentine(?) artist. An important point here is that Andrea del Castagno lived and worked mainly in Florence and his masterpieces are there, including his work in the refectory of the convent of Sant'Apollonia, of which his much deteriorated Resurrection is a part. In Andrea's fresco (not a good photo unfortunately) we can see a number of elements which remind us of Piero's great painting, such as and particularly, the horizontal band across the lower third of the image, formed by the sarcophagus and the sleeping soldiers in front if it. One soldier especially is of interest and he is the one with his head propped up against the edge of the tomb; this figure is very similar to a soldier in Piero's painting, in almost the same position. We do not know if Piero ever saw Andrea's fresco but, in general terms, there are some striking similarities: as mentioned, the disposition of the soldiers and the sarcophagus; the figure of Christ supported on the edge of the tomb; the victory flag - although in the other hand; the partially exposed torso, and the trees on either side of the picture. Given these similarities in the two images in question (Piero's and Andrea's), it would seem possible that Piero was influenced by Andrea's work but, as just noted, the date of Piero's fresco is actually unknown at present.


Resurrection by Andrea del Castagno, 1447, much-damaged fresco, Sant'Apollonia, Florence

The next image shows a version I discovered only recently, near the northern Italian city of Piacenza. It is painted on the wall of a small chapel in a small Romanesque church situated on the top of a fortified hill called Castell'Arquato. Although the hands are doing different things in the work by the anonymous painter, the general position of Christ, and the general composition of the image, are very similar to Piero's, so much so as to seem to me to have been directly influenced by him. Apart from the stance of the Christ, similar to that of Piero's image, and the horizontal sarcophagus, parallel with the picture-plane, as in Piero's, note the framing architecture, much simplified but also present - as beautiful Corinthian columns - in the Sansepolcro fresco.

Let's look at the soldiers particularly: again, four men, disposed as a tight group in front of the sarcophagus; the one in red in the centre resembles in many respects the soldier in the same position in Piero's picture, even in the way his head is leaning against the edge of the tomb. The soldier on the right, with his back to us, also mimics in his pose the corresponding soldier in Piero's painting; and, to 'seal the deal' so to speak, the figure on the left, forming as he does a rough triangle with his position, is obviously taken from Piero, where the same figure is a masterpiece of Renaissance composition (and a much more definite triangle). It is interesting to note here the difference in the handling of the same element, that is, the position and drawing of this particular soldier: in Piero's case, a strong, clear structure, containing in its solitariness a forceful humanist emotional charge; while the figure by the anonymous painter, partly perhaps because it is derived from elsewhere and not the original scheme of that artist, is weak and sloppy, lacking any interior force or conviction 3. The anonymous work at Castell'Arquato is a decoration purely and simply, it carries no power of either religious or emotional import, its innate aesthetic heritage is Medieval even though its putative form is of the Renaissance (the sarcophagus drawn in perspective is not possible before that time).



Resurrection by an Anonymous Painter (Florentine?), late-1400s (?), The Chapel of Saint Catherine of Alexandria 
Collegiata of Santa Maria Assunta, Castell'Arquato (near Piacenza)


The image below takes us into another, later period, that of Venetian Mannerism. It was painted by Titian as one side of a processional banner but was later modified to function as an independent picture to be hung on a wall. It is already different from the paintings we have so far examined in that it is a painting in oil on canvas; the others we have seen  have been either in fresco, on a wall, or in tempera on wood. This image is different in many respects from that of the earlier Piero della Francesca: our position is low in respect of Christ, in fact, we can see the soles of His feet! On the other hand, our position in relation to the soldiers is somewhat equivocal: we seem to be more or less on the same level as the they are, although perhaps not really.

Christ is shown floating high above the sarcophagus, looking away into a distance which does not involve us; the sarcophagus is oriented at an angle to the plane of the canvas, pointing slightly upwards because of our viewpoint, and the soldiers are represented as being in a state of confusion, definitely awake, except oddly for the central one. The soldier on our left is actually the largest figure in the composition, a painter's - and Venetian - device to indicate proximity to the scene on the part of the viewer. To my mind, Titian's picture, while obviously of its time, could better function as simply an image of the Risen Christ, that is, with the Christ as the sole subject; the lower part of this painting is rhetorical and over-stated for modern tastes or, at least, for mine.


Resurrection by Titian (Tiziano Vecellio), oil on canvas, 1542-44 
Museo Nazionale delle Marche, Palazzo Ducale, Urbino

The following two images are both from the late-Medieval period, containing many contemporary devices but, at the same time, also indicating future developments. The first, by Benedetto di Bindo, about 1412, shares a few elements with the version of Piero della Francesca, not the least being a (certain) knowledge of correct perspective (in the sarcophagus); the lid of the tomb however, indicates that he still has something to learn! But the central, upright Christ and the geometrically constructed sarcophagus are pointers towards Piero's image. The background unfortunately, is an extremely bland suggestion of place; the soldiers are positioned in a balanced fashion, one at either end of the sarcophagus, and two stretched out at its base. In my opinion, a fairly dreary, unthoughtful image.

The second of these two is by Ugolino di Nerio and dates from about 90 years before the di Bindo. Although the earlier work, it is far more engaging, more thoughtful, and as such, more succinct. In both these pictures, Christ is placed in the centre of the composition, with one foot up on the edge of his sarcophagus; both carry the banner of victory, and both are set in a symbolically-represented landscape, Ugolino's being, while still conservative, clearly the more interesting. I don't know this but I suspect from the condition of the colours that Ugolino's picture has been restored, whereas Benedetto's hasn't been; naturally, this makes a great difference to their 'legibility'. Ugolino's painting indicates that he is apparently unaware of perspective drawing, his sarcophagus being typically Gothic in its odd management of planes and geometric space. Nevertheless, there is force in his Christ and beauty in his colours; the reclining positions of his soldiers have been studied and this has added to  their diversity and interest. He has moreover, balanced the straight lines of the sarcophagus with the gentle curve of his rocky background.



The Resurrection by Benedetto di Bindo, predella painting, c.1412. Siena



The Resurrection by Ugolini di Nerio, 1324-25, predella painting, probably tempera
 National Gallery, London

The final painting is again a predella picture, that is, one of a series of small paintings placed in the carpentry of the frame at the base (predella) of a much larger altarpiece. This one is extremely interesting because it is an example of the type which contains both forms of Christ's 'tomb', that is, the Biblical rock with a hole in it, and a Roman-style sarcophagus; this little painting also has what may be understood as a heavy stone 'door', apparently just dislodged by the divine event here portrayed. The 'rock' is represented as an independent outcrop, in a red landscape, with a walled city in the left background, and a temple (?) in the right. Four sleeping soldiers, two leaning against the rock, two stretched out on the ground in front of it, complete the iconography. Christ is shown in a Gothic 'S' pose, but with clear classical references in His structure. This painting too is a decoration, fulfilling certain iconographic requirements, but offering little else. 

The date of 1480, years after Piero della Francesca is believed to have painted his masterpiece in Sansepolcro, is telling: even at that 'late' date, many artists were still influenced by earlier (late-Medieval) aesthetics; in stark contrast with this however, note the completely Renaissance interior - that is, drawn using perspective - partly visible here to the left in this photo. To be fair, even today, there would be many who would find Piero's image far too refined, far too 'essential', and who would prefer the pleasing decorativeness of Matteo's image, or something similar. Matteo's painting is a delightful thing in its own right and I don't wish to sound as though I don't like it or approve of it; there are many different pictures as there are many different types of people who look at them - or who don't!



The Resurrection by Matteo di Giovanni, 1480, probably tempera, predella painting. Siena


The representation of the Risen Christ is, quite apart from the setting of the scene, one of the main variables in images of the Resurrection; it may be put into three rough categories: the uncommunicative and unattainable divine being (Andrea di Bonaiuto and Titian); the divine-man type, severe but consonant with us, if unrealisable (Piero della Francesca, Donatello and Tino da Camaino); and the softer, gentler type, neither man nor divine, a mere symbol (the Anonymous painter, Matteo di Giovanni, Ugolino and Benedetto, as well as, unusually, Andrea del Castagno 4). Naturally, the absence or non-representation of Christ carries with it other, some may say deeper, spiritual significance.



1 The elegantly simplified sarcophagus in Piero's painting, and in Andrea del Castagno's as well, seems to be a free interpretation of classical sarcophagi; I say this because all those that I have seen, including in Rome, have been considerably more elaborate in their decoration and never, in my experience, with coloured marble inlay or panels. Sarcophagi have enjoyed an exceptionally long vogue in Western culture, being in continuous use from Roman times, through the Medieval period into the Renaissance and much beyond. The point in the frescos of course, was the generalised reference to classical models and the requirement for a clearly horizontal formal element, at least in Piero's case.

An example of a Roman sarcophagus, decorated in a relatively restrained way
Museo Nazionale Romano Terme di Diocleziano, Rome

2 Roberto Longhi, Italian art historian and author of the vastly influential Piero della Francesca (amongst much else), first published in 1927. Longhi's dates for Piero's works are approximate, as they must be, there being a depressing lack of contemporary documents concerning either Piero or his paintings.


3  Some texts claim that the Saint Catherine chapel in the Collegiata at Castell'Arquato was constructed and frescoed at the beginning of the 15th century, others give a date of 1455! In my opinion, the fresco we are looking at could not have been done as early as the beginning of the 1400s, and is much more likely to be the work of a minor painter of the period post-1450. 
Although I would give only a very approximate date for the anonymous Resurrection at Castell'Arquato (late-15th century to early 16th), in relation to the probable influence of Piero della Francesca, as mentioned, scholars have in common that they can't agree on the dating of most of his works. If Piero's version of this subject was painted later than the middle of the 15th century (for example, Longhi's date of c.1469), then I would be confident in saying that his Resurrection was the iconographic source for the image at Castell'Arquato.           

4 Andrea del Castagno, usually a robust and forceful painter, is not well-known for the Resurrection image discussed here, but rather, amongst others, for the much larger fresco below that, his Last Supper, a stupendous piece of Renaissance painting, not to mention perspective construction.



Andrea del Castagno, the Last Supper, 1447, fresco in the refectory at Sant'Apollonia in Florence. 
Above it, to the left, may be seen his Resurrection, as well as other images. On the left wall is a detached fresco of the Crucifixion, also be Andrea.






Note:

Piero della Francesca, detail of the restoration of his Resurrection in Sansepolcro, being carried out this year. The restorers have removed the infill around the painted fictive frame, partially damaged when the fresco was moved, at some time in the past, together with the part of the wall on which it was painted; obviously, when the restoration is complete, all these 'discoveries' will be hidden once again. In relation to the iconography though, it is interesting that the soldier on the right seems to be leaning his elbow on a rock; that rock may have some reference to the legend concerning the founding of the city of Borgo San Sepolcro, as it was originally called, according to which the town was founded by travellers on their way back from the Holy Land, carrying some rocks from the Holy Sepulchre: hence the name of the city itself, in Italian: Sansepolcro.

In relation to fresco technique, there are two basic methods: in Italian, buon fresco or 'true fresco', where pigments mixed with water are painted directly onto wet plaster; there is no opportunity to correct using this technique, once the plaster has dried. The other is, in Italian, fresco a secco ('when dry') that is, painting on top of true fresco with pigments mixed with a range of binders, such as tempera or oil. The problem with this latter method is that it is not nearly so permanent as true fresco and the risk of the paint falling off the surface is always a problem.



























Thursday, 17 August 2017

Some thoughts on 'Modernism' in Late Medieval Italian Art




In these first 17 years of the 21st century, with Modernism and its descendants as part and parcel of everyday life, at least in Western countries, one is struck by the 'Modernism' or modernity of various periods in the history of western art. Even certain aspects of ancient Egyptian art strike us today as 'modern', that is, modern in a 20th or 21st century way; of course, they were 'modern' also in the time in which they were produced! Often we forget, as just alluded to, that when 'ancient' or medieval or Renaissance art was made, at that time it was 'modern'; in fact, Vasari, a 16th century father of art history, referred to the work of some of his contemporaries as 'modern', and said that they were working in 'the modern style'.


At Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Rome, a 1st century BC Greek bronze of a Boxer, seen here from the back, found in Rome during an excavation. This image is included to demonstrate what is was that early and later Christian artists rejected; this is clearly not a religious subject but, just the same, this kind and level of imitation of Nature gradually became of less and less interest for the developing Christian faith.

Here we need to be careful, as with all history, not to read our perceptions of present-day reality into the work of the past; the way we might, for example, describe a social situation today may not have anything to do with the way people of a given earlier period understood that same social situation; much less can we judge them for their social arrangements. Similarly, we need to be careful about applying the term 'modern' to work clearly not produced in a period we today might reasonably refer to as 'modern', with regard to ourselves; seeing a similarity is one thing, interpreting it is another. However, when recently visiting some very beautiful old places in Italy, it often occurred to me just how 'modern' many old things looked.

In this article, I would like to discuss some late medieval works, keeping in mind what has just been said above. We could begin with a carving, a relief-sculpture, on the side of a sarcophagus which is now displayed in the museum at Santa Croce, in Florence. It is a stark, frank and deliberate work, made by the Sienese artist, Tino di Camaino. The subject is the Resurrection and, both in its essential formalism and straightforward statement, easily calls to mind many aspects of early 20th century Modernism. In fact, this carving was made approximately 700 years ago and is not 'Modernist' in the sense that a Mondrian or a Henry Moore is. 


 Tomb of Gastone della Torre, Archbishop of Milano, later, Patriarch of Aquileia (d. Firenze 1317) by Tino di Camaino, Siena c. 1280-1337; Santa Croce, Florence

Although made around 1317, this powerful smallish work anticipates at least one compositional characteristic of Renaissance painting and that is its dependence on the stability of the triangle or pyramid as a basic structure or armature. The scene is set within a square format and, on closer scrutiny, we can see that the figure of Christ is placed in the vertical centre, with the slope of his shoulders towards his raised knee and his left arm, creating 'linking' lines towards the bottom left and right corners, thereby forming a triangle with Christ's head as its apex. The 'structure' is very solid and is reinforced by the weighty forms of the sleeping guards crowded into the base of the composition, in front of Christ's sarcophagus itself. The clear similarity to the great masterpiece of Piero della Francesca must be obvious, not just in this triangle-based structure but also in the way the Christ is placed, his pose; not to mention the 'incomplete' guards: these figures are forced into the lower third of the scene, as in  Piero della Francesca's fresco, but, as well, they are not fully visible - that is to say, parts appear to be missing - as has been noted concerning the guard with the red shield in Piero's painting. In Tino's relief-sculpture here, only one of the guards has any hope of being accommodated in this space, with the remaining two managing to have only their heads and upper torsos squeezed in! Tino's career overlapped that of Giotto (in fact, they died in the same year) and it is interesting to see the re-awakening of awareness of 'Classical' art, meaning normally ancient Roman art, in both men: the more angular, upright, straight-lined approach, so to say, of Tino's Risen Christ, has something more of Rome about it, and somewhat less of Byzantium 1.


The Norman cathedral of Monreale in Sicily, begun 1172, whose incredible mosaics adorn nearly all the interior surfaces of this stupendous building. Note the hierarchical disposition of the saints below Mary and the angels, themselves below Christ Pantokrator.

Typical medieval and Gothic religious art tended to reject Classical models, instead deriving substantially from Byzantine aesthetics 2. The 'modern' look comes from the historical process of a rejection of 'pagan' (Classical) forms - imitating as they did to a very high degree, what was in Nature - and the search for a means of representation much more related to the spiritual aspect of life, a kind of step-up from ephemeral Nature per se, into the realm of the transcendental spirit, as well as a clearly hierarchical view of the 'order' of things. It may be noted here the preponderance of linear or frieze-like structure in much ancient Roman work, in other words, a kind of democratic or republican view, where everyone (theoretically) was on the same level. This view persisted to some extent in the late-classical-Byzantine work to be seen in Ravenna for instance; but gradually, the Orthodox hierarchical attitude took over. And, although ancient Roman art was in many respects quite pared back, and Byzantine work on the other hand quite elaborate, as 'barbarian' tribes and cultures began to overrun the late western Roman world, some visual art became more simplified, that is more schematised, more 'symbolic'. The aim also of much art, particularly and most importantly religious art, was to clearly convey a message, often a quite complex one, to a largely illiterate population; clearly legible forms with easily identifiable actors and attributes were the basic requirements of artistic production, along with the need to have these messages comprehensible from some distance, for instance, from quite high up on the facades of Gothic cathedrals 3, or from the high internal walls of those same churches as well as the walls, both interior and exterior, of public buildings such as town halls.


David and Ezechiel, in the Palazzo Farnese, Piacenza: 'School of Piacenza'; second half of the 12th century. Note the almost African stylisation of the faces and the Giacometti-like elongation of the bodies, together with the important rhythmic/structural function of the line work. The two figures still have something of the original square form of the blocks of stone they were made from and so we have 'truth to materials' as well, another Modernist concept.

When we see ancient or very old artworks that remind us of modern aesthetics, we are not therefore necessarily able to read and comprehend either the intentional meaning or the 'artistic' suppositions which produced the work in question. The didactic function (intentional meaning) of much religious art in the medieval period, and therefore its physical forms, are almost at polar variance with the intentional meaning of a lot of early Modernism which, partly as a reaction to the material titillation of Impressionism, sought a far more intellectual approach to both form and content. Such intellectualism would have communicated next to nothing to an illiterate peasant living in medieval Europe; just as the extremely highly-refined illuminated manuscripts, both secular and religious, of the same period, destined for a much smaller, educated elite, would have been so much 'Greek' to those same peasants.

Propagation of the Christian message was the principal scope of religious art, not really individual expression as such. That given however, within the often-repeated themes of the Life and Passion of Jesus for example, with the constant refrain of the same symbols and attributes of both Christ and the other figures in these narratives, it is surprising just how distinct are the individual characteristics of the artists who made that art. Nevertheless, the artist as individual, not to mention the artist as independent intellectual - as opposed to mere tradesman or artisan - was to all intents and purposes, a long way off in the future of art history. What is more surprising then is that artists were able to 'express themselves' to the extent that they did: within the subject of large, suspended wooden crosses, for example, at first glance very similar to one another, there are marked differences between the work of one artist and the next.

This particular subject required a painted image of Christ on the wooden cross - a type known as Christus patiens 4 - itself a very large and heavy piece of carpentry, with images of, on one end of the cross-bar St John, and on the other end, Christ's mother Mary; at the top there was usually the sign with the letters INRI which could be handled in different ways; at the base of the cross, normally some representation of Golgotha and a skull and perhaps some additional elements. Today, in Italy, many of these crosses have been or are being restored and happily, we can now see them once again in their extraordinary beauty - and understand why they were such powerful statements. But here also, given the very restricted iconography, artists were able to imbue these symbols with a high degree of personal formal interpretation and, therefore, individuality.



Crucifix, 1380 by Niccolò di Pietro Gerini and Pietro Nelli, Sta Croce, Florence. This example is complete, having the images of both Mary and St John in place, as well as the sign at the top and the skull together with additional saints or donors at the base. Above the INRI sign is an image of a pelican feeding its heart to its young, an obvious symbol of the sacrifice of Jesus. All the gold-leafed carpentry is intact. 



The badly damaged and now restored symbol of the disastrous 1966 flood in Florence, the stupendous Crucifix by Cimabue, in the Sacristy, Sta Croce, Florence. In iconographical terms, it is complete but the flood waters have left irreparable lacunae in the body of Christ. It is remarkable that these Crucifixes are about double life-size, in any case, very big!



The beautifully restored Crucifix by Giotto (c.1315) hanging in the church of  Ognissanti, Florence. It is missing its conclusion at the base, the blood from Christ's feet normally shown flowing onto a skull, the symbol of both Golgotha and Adam, below the base of the Cross. This example is interesting in that it has an image of God the Father (?) above the sign at the top; note the 'wings' of decorative work on either side of the body of the cross, below the crossbar. The shape of the frames around the smaller images is that used to enclose narrative scenes in other situations, such as the doors (north and south) of the Baptistry in Florence. Note that the Cross is blue and that blue appears in the three minor sections as well.



Another beautiful Crucifix by Giotto, 1290s (?), this time hanging in the church of Santa Maria Novella, Florence. It has the usual images of Mary and the young St John at either end of the crossbar but, below the base of the Cross, it also has a kind of naturalistic representation of the the hill called Golgotha, where Christ was crucified. In this hill is the skull and, in fact, the blood coming from Christ's feet runs down onto this little hill. Again, as in the other example by Giotto, there are decorative 'wings', as it were behind the body of Christ.

This Crucifix (1265), another by Cimabue (thought to have been Giotto's master), hangs in the church of San Domenico, in Arezzo. Like the Giottos, it has 'wings' below the crossbar and, like the other example here by Cimabue, the body of Christ has a typical Gothic 'sway', forming a kind of elegant 's' shape.


An example of a Christus triumphans-type of Crucifix: note that the figure is 'alive', looking at us, and clothed. This example, also known as the Volto Santo (Holy Face), is in Sansepolcro, near Arezzo, and is thought to date from the 10th or 11th century. Unlike the previous examples, it is a polychrome sculpture, not a painting. See Note 4 below.

One reason why it is relatively easy for contemporary viewers today to see 'modern' traits in older artwork is that, since the advent of the Renaissance, with its heavy focus on imitation of Nature - an explicit goal - art has appeared to look more and more 'real'; we could say that, since the then-renewed interest in classical art (Greek and Roman) artists have indeed developed their 'realism' to an astounding degree. So much so in fact, that the average viewer (as opposed to the specialist), when confronted with many of the 'developments' of the early 20th century, saw nothing other than childish simplification. When we see even older work, that is pre-Renaissance, its apparent simplification is precisely what reminds us of 'modern' art, understood as 20th century Modernism. What seems now more likely, is that early Modernists, those working in a figurative style at any rate, were actually returning to a kind of pared-back statement, a more synthetic, purified symbolism, more akin to some medieval aesthetics than to those developed in and since the Renaissance 5.

A particular hall-mark of say, Nicola Pisano, or Tino di Camaino, and a lot of Modernist figuration, is that both deal with the subject of a given work and not with its embellishment; in other words, they both produce succinct, frank statements, dependent wholly or mostly on the representation of the overt subject of the work, devoid of unnecessary or gratuitous decoration or elaboration. An example of this, by the perhaps less well-known Fra Gugliemo da Pisa, is his pulpit (c. 1270) in the church of San Giovanni Fuorcivitas, in Pistoia 6. This characteristic (of specifically dealing with a work's given subject), especially following the Academic and other excesses of the 19th century, and the subsequent counter-development of Modernism, makes works of this type 'aesthetically' accessible to modern viewers.


The marble pulpit, c. 1270, by Fra Gugliemo in the Romanesque church of San Giovanni Fuorcivitas, Pistoia (Tuscany). Note the almost crowded composition, dealing only with the subject event of each panel; no superfluous details. Influences here from ancient Roman sarcophagi.





1 Compare Tino's Risen Christ with the photos of the David and Ezechiel in this article: note the apparent angularity of Tino's work as compared with the sinuous, flowing 'harmony' of the two Old Testament figures. Tino is searching towards a representation of the way a body actually looks as opposed to simply remaking a standardised symbol.

2 Here we should note that, even in the period we might refer to as 'late medieval', artists, such as Nicola and Giovanni Pisano for instance, were already beginning to look anew at Classical art although the general aesthetic of that time was still 'late-medieval' - also known as Gothic (a long and complex study of its own but a term which covers particularly the late-medieval period).
  We may further observe that the monumental or commemorative sarcophagus was itself a 'Classical' art form and still very popular in medieval times. It became even more so during the Renaissance when, however, a declared interest in - and indeed love of - Classical art in all its forms was the prime aesthetic driver of visual art.

3 This requirement of easy legibility, especially from a distance, was one which dated back to the Egyptians and Assyrians and helps to explain the often monumental scale of paintings and sculpture in later public buildings such as churches.

4 The 'Christus patiens' type took over from the earlier 'Christus triumphans' type: respectively, an almost-nude figure clearly demonstrating the suffering, both spiritual and physical, of Christ; the latter, a usually clothed, 'living' figure with arms outstretched in (happy?) triumph over death (or sin).

5 In this regard, it is interesting to contemplate the confused approach of the so-called Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, with its astonishingly fanciful notions of the 'purity' and 'simplicity' of the art which preceded Raphael. Part of its members' problem was that they were living in exactly the same period as the heyday of Academicism and, unwittingly it seems, were not able to free themselves from many of the excesses they claimed to stand against. The work of the Pre-Raphaelites is a romantically confused jumble of mis-understood and poorly comprehended art history, fed as much by their Victorian and insular taste as by any clear philosophical conception. I have never seen any Pre-Raphaelite head or composition which even remotely reminded me of the candid, frank and clear-eyed works of a Pisano, a Lorenzetti or a Tino di Camaino, much less a Giotto or a Duccio! 

6 Interestingly, this pulpit, and others like it by Nicola and Giovanni Pisano, all have this 'crowded' composition, often with events occurring in successive 'waves' from the top of the image to the bottom; this same characteristic was later picked up by the Mannerist painter Pontormo, although with clear influences from Michelangelo as well. Michelangelo's use of the crowded composition, whose first manifestation is his very early Battle of the Centaurs, may plausibly be a result of looking at the work of those late-Medieval masters, as well as at the antique Roman sculpture available to him at that time - the same which may have influenced those Medieval artists!