The Last Judgment, 1265-70, Coppo di Marcovaldo, Florence, the central figure gracing the dome of the San Giovanni Baptistery. |
Very often when students today begin to studying art, they start with the notion (consciously or unconsciously) that the Italian Renaissance was where and when Western art began. There was even a time, when the British Pre-Raphaelites also considered the Renaissance to be where Western art ended as well (at least in their own narrow minds). Some art students are vaguely aware of Egyptian, Greek and Roman art but those eras are so long ago they tend to get locked in the back of their minds, shrouded in a foggy mist. For all intents and purposes, they consider Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael to be the first "real" artists in the history of art. Of course, nothing could be further from the truth. The Italian Renaissance did not simply "bloom" from nothing. Thus, those who teach high school art and college Art History 102 find themselves having to "flesh out" this all-important period with names such as Duccio, Cimabue, and Giotto. However, even that stellar cast is insufficient to explain fully the rise of the Italian Renaissance. We need to add the name, Coppo di Marcovaldo.
Crucifix in the Cathedral of Pistoia, 1274, Coppo di Marcovaldo. |
If the name, Coppo di Marcovaldo, left you scratching your head and muttering, "Who?" That's to be expected. Few art history texts (and their profs) do much more than mention his name (if that). However, if the other three call up the same reaction, then by all means click on each name above and do your homework. Although Coppo was a contemporary of some these early painting masters, he was too obscure at the time to have been their instructor. He was, however, likely more than a mere acquaintance. Though his surviving works are few, there is little doubt he was a significant influence on all three.
Painting in Italy at the start of the 13th-century had two strains. The first was a long, evolutionary, medieval style having its roots in classical Roman antiquity. The second influence, was Byzantine, primarily in the form of mosaics, also an outgrowth of Roman antiquity but of the Eastern branch of the divided empire. By around 1250 or 1260, Byzantine mosaics were starting to spread to Italy, and more importantly, to influence painters. One of them, probably the most important of them all, was Coppo di Marcovaldo. Art historians consider him to be the first Italian painter to "marry" these two styles into a consistent style of his own, best exemplified in his Madonna del Bordone (above), ca. 1261.
Christ enthroned. Though a mosaic, there are many painterly qualities to the gold leaf tiles (paint applied over the gold leaf. |
One hell of a painting--Christianity rooted in fear. |
Medieval Byzantine mosaics flavored with Italian Renaissance painting. |
Once again, mind-expanding and historically interesting. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you for you art appreciation.
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