Title: Lives of the Most Eminent Painters Sculptors and Architects, Vol. 04 (of 10)
Author: Giorgio Vasari
Translator: Gaston du C. De Vere
Release date: March 27, 2009 [eBook #28420]
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Mark C. Orton, Christine P. Travers and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
(This file was produced from images generously made
available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
PHILIP LEE WARNER,
PUBLISHER TO THE MEDICI SOCIETY, LIMITED
7 GRAFTON
ST. LONDON, W. 1912-14
| PAGE | |
| Filippo Lippi, called Filippino | 1 |
| Bernardino Pinturicchio | 11 |
| Francesco Francia | 21 |
| Pietro Perugino [Pietro Vannucci, or Pietro da Castel della Pieve] | 31 |
| Vittore Scarpaccia [Carpaccio], and other Venetian and Lombard Painters | 49 |
| Jacopo, called L'Indaco | 63 |
| Luca Signorelli [Luca da Cortona] | 69 |
| The Author's Preface to the Third Part | 77 |
| Leonardo da Vinci | 87 |
| Giorgione da Castelfranco | 107 |
| Antonio da Correggio | 115 |
| Piero di Cosimo | 123 |
| Bramante da Urbino | 135 |
| Fra Bartolommeo di San Marco [Baccio della Porta] | 149 |
| Mariotto Albertinelli | 163 |
| Raffaellino del Garbo | 173 |
| Torrigiano | 181 |
| Giuliano and Antonio da San Gallo | 189 |
| Raffaello da Urbino [Raffaello Sanzio] | 207 |
| Guglielmo da Marcilla [Guillaume de Marcillac] | 251 |
| Simone, called Il Cronaca [Simone del Pollaiuolo] | 263 |
| Domenico Puligo | 277 |
| Index of Names | 285 |
| Filippo Lippi (Filippino) | The Vision of S. Bernard | Florence: Church of the Badia | 2 |
| Bernardino Pinturicchio | The Madonna in Glory | San Gimignano: Palazzo Pubblico | 14 |
| Benedetto Buonfiglio | Madonna, Child, and Three Angels | Perugia: Pinacoteca | 18 |
| Francesco Francia | Pietà | London: N.G., 180 | 26 |
| Pietro Perugino | Apollo and Marsyas | Paris: Louvre, 1509 | 34 |
| Pietro Perugino | Triptych: The Madonna adoring, with the Archangels Michael, Raphael, and Tobit | London: N.G., 288 | 42 |
| Vittore Scarpaccia (Carpaccio) | The Vision of S. Ursula | Venice: Accademia, 578 | 56 |
| Vincenzio Catena | S. Jerome in his Study | London: N.G., 694 | 58 |
| Giovan Battista da Conigliano (Cima) | Detail: Tobit and the Angel | Venice: Accademia, 592 | 58 |
| Luca Signorelli | Pan | Berlin: Kaiser Friedrich Museum, 79A | 72 |
| Andrea Verrocchio | The Baptism in Jordan | Florence: Accademia, 71 | 92 |
| Leonardo da Vinci | Monna Lisa | (formerly) Paris: Louvre, 1601 | 102 |
| Giorgione da Castelfranco | Figures in a Landscape | Venice: Prince Giovanelli's Collection | 110 |
| Antonio da Correggio | Antiope | Paris: Louvre, 1118 | 118 |
| Antonio da Correggio | The Adoration of the Magi | Milan: Brera, 427 | 122 |
| Piero di Cosimo | The Death of Procris | London: N.G., 698 | 126 |
| Fra Bartolommeo di San Marco | The Deposition from the Cross | Florence: Pitti, 64 | 152 |
| Mariotto Albertinelli | The Salutation | Florence: Uffizi, 1259 | 168 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | S. George and the Dragon | S. Petersburg: Hermitage, 39 | 210 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | Angelo Doni | Florence: Pitti, 61 | 214 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | The Three Graces | Chantilly, 38 | 242 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | Baldassare Gastiglione | Paris: Louvre, 1505 | 248 |
| Filippo Lippi (Filippino) | The Liberation of S. Peter | Florence: S. Maria Del Carmine | 6 |
| Filippo Lippi (Filippino) | S. John the Evangelist Raising Drusiana from the Dead | Florence: S. Maria Novella, Strozzi Chapel | 8 |
| Filippo Lippi (Filippino) | The Adoration of the Magi | Florence: Uffizi, 1257 | 10 |
| Bernardino Pinturicchio | Frederick III Crowning the Poet Æneas Sylvius | Siena: Sala Piccolominea | 16 |
| Bernardino Pinturicchio | Pope Alexander VI Adoring the Risen Christ | Rome: the Vatican, Borgia Apartments | 16 |
| Francesco Francia and a Pupil | Medals | London: British Museum | 22 |
| Francesco Francia | Madonna and Child, With Saints | Bologna: S. Giacomo Maggiore, Bentivoglio Chapel | 24 |
| Pietro Perugino | The Deposition | Florence: Pitti, 164 | 38 |
| Pietro Perugino | Christ Giving the Keys to S. Peter | Rome: Sistine Chapel | 40 |
| Pietro Perugino | Fortitude and Temperance, with Warriors | Perugia: Collegio Del Cambio | 40 |
| Giovanni (Lo Spagna) | Madonna and Child, with Saints | Assisi: Lower Church | 46 |
| Stefano da Verona (da Zevio) | The Madonna and Child with S. Catharine in a Rose Garden | Verona: Gallery, 559 | 52 |
| Aldigieri da Zevio (Altichiero) | Presentation to the Madonna of Three Knights of the Cavalli Family | Verona: S. Anastasia | 54 |
| Vittore Scarpaccia (Carpaccio) | S. George and the Dragon | Venice: S. Giorgio Degli Schiavoni | 56 |
| Marco Bassiti (Basaiti) | Christ on the Mount of Olives | Venice: Accademia, 69 | 60 |
| Giovanni Buonconsigli | Pietà | Vicenza: Pinacoteca, 22 | 60 |
| Luca Signorelli | Detail: The Last Judgment | Orvieto: Duomo | 74 |
| Leonardo da Vinci | The Adoration of the Magi | Florence: Uffizi, 1252 | 94 |
| Leonardo da Vinci | The Last Supper | Milan: S. Maria delle Grazie | 96 |
| Leonardo da Vinci | Cartoon: The Madonna and Child with S. Anne | London: Burlington House | 98 |
| Leonardo da Vinci (?) | Fragment of Cartoon: The Battle of the Standard | Oxford: Ashmolean Museum | 104 |
| Giovan Antonio Boltraffio | Man and Woman Praying | Milan: Brera, 281 | 104 |
| Giorgione da Castelfranco | Portrait of a Young Man | Berlin: Kaiser Friedrich Museum, 12A | 112 |
| Giorgione da Castelfranco | Judith | S. Petersburg: Hermitage, 112 | 112 |
| Giorgione da Castelfranco (?) | Caterina, Queen of Cyprus | Milan: Crespi Collection | 114 |
| Antonio da Correggio | Detail: S. Thomas and S. James the Less | Parma: S. Giovanni Evangelista | 120 |
| Antonio da Correggio | The Madonna and Child with S. Jerome | Parma: Gallery, 351 | 120 |
| Piero di Cosimo | Perseus delivering Andromeda | Florence: Uffizi, 1312 | 128 |
| Piero di Cosimo | Venus, Mars, and Cupid | Berlin: Kaiser Friedrich Museum, 107 | 130 |
| Piero di Cosimo | Francesco Giamberti | Hague: Royal Museum, 255 | 134 |
| Bramante da Urbino | Interior of Sacristy | Milan: S. Satiro | 138 |
| Bramante da Urbino | Tempietto | Rome: S. Pietro in Montorio | 142 |
| Bramante da Urbino | Palazzo Giraud | Rome | 146 |
| Fra Bartolommeo di San Marco | The Holy Family | Rome: Corsini Gallery, 579 | 154 |
| Fra Bartolommeo di San Marco | S. Mark | Florence: Pitti, 125 | 158 |
| Fra Bartolommeo di San Marco | God the Father, with SS. Mary Magdalen and Catharine | Lucca: Gallery, 12 | 160 |
| Mariotto Albertinelli | The Madonna enthroned, with Saints | Florence: Accademia, 167 | 166 |
| Raffaellino del Garbo | The Resurrection | Florence: Accademia, 90 | 176 |
| Torrigiano | Tomb of Henry VII | London: Westminster Abbey | 186 |
| Giuliano da San Gallo | Façade of S. Maria delle Carceri | Prato | 194 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | Lo Sposalizio | Milan: Brera, 472 | 212 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | Maddalena Doni | Florence: Pitti, 59 | 212 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | "The School of Athens" | Rome: The Vatican | 216 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | The "Disputa del Sacramento" | Rome: The Vatican | 222 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | The Mass of Bolsena | Rome: The Vatican | 224 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | Pope Leo X with Two Cardinals | Florence: Pitti, 40 | 230 |
| Raffaello da Urbino | The Transfiguration | Rome: The Vatican | 240 |
| Simone (Il Cronaca) | Detail of Cornice | Florence: Palazzo Strozzi | 266 |
| Niccolò Grosso | Iron Link-holder | Florence: Palazzo Strozzi | 268 |
| Niccolò Grosso | Iron Lantern | Florence: Palazzo Strozzi | 268 |
| Simone (Il Cronaca) | Interior of Sacristy | Florence: S. Spirito | 270 |
| Domenico Puligo (?) | Madonna and Child, with Saints | Florence: S. Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi | 280 |
FILIPPO LIPPI (FILIPPINO): THE VISION OF S. BERNARD
(Florence: Church of the Badia. Panel)
View larger image
There was at this same time in Florence a painter of most beautiful intelligence and most lovely invention, namely, Filippo, son of Fra Filippo of the Carmine, who, following in the steps of his dead father in the art of painting, was brought up and instructed, being still very young, by Sandro Botticelli, notwithstanding that his father had commended him on his death-bed to Fra Diamante, who was much his friend—nay, almost his brother. Such was the intelligence of Filippo, and so abundant his invention in painting, and so bizarre and new were his ornaments, that he was the first who showed to the moderns the new method of giving variety to vestments, and embellished and adorned his figures with the girt-up garments of antiquity. He was also the first to bring to light grotesques, in imitation of the antique, and he executed them on friezes in terretta or in colours, with more design and grace than the men before him had shown; wherefore it was a marvellous thing to see the strange fancies that he expressed in painting. What is more, he never executed a single work in which he did not avail himself with great diligence of Roman antiquities, such as vases, buskins, trophies, banners, helmet-crests, adornments of temples, ornamental head-dresses, strange kinds of draperies, armour, scimitars, swords, togas, mantles, and such a variety of other beautiful things, that we owe him a very great and perpetual obligation, seeing that he added beauty and adornment to art in this respect.
In his earliest youth he completed the Chapel of the Brancacci in the Carmine at Florence, begun by Masolino, and left not wholly finished by Masaccio on account of his death. Filippo, therefore, gave it its final perfection with his own hand, and executed what was lacking in one scene, wherein S. Peter and S. Paul are restoring to life the nephew of the Emperor. In the nude figure of this boy he portrayed the painter Francesco Granacci, then a youth; and he also made portraits of the Chevalier, Messer Tommaso Soderini, Piero Guicciardini, father of Messer Francesco the historian, Piero del Pugliese, and the poet Luigi Pulci; likewise Antonio Pollaiuolo, and himself as a youth, as he then was, which he never did again throughout the whole of his life, so that it has not been possible to find a portrait of him at a more mature age. In the scene following this he portrayed Sandro Botticelli, his master, and many other friends and people of importance; among others, the broker Raggio, a man of great intelligence and wit, who executed in relief on a conch the whole Inferno of Dante, with all the circles and divisions of the pits and the nethermost well in their exact proportions, and all the figures and details that were most ingeniously imagined and described by that great poet; which conch was held in those times to be a marvellous thing.
Next, in the Chapel of Francesco del Pugliese at Campora, a seat of the Monks of the Badia, without Florence, he painted a panel in distemper of S. Bernard, to whom Our Lady is appearing with certain angels, while he is writing in a wood; which picture is held to be admirable in certain respects, such as rocks, books, herbage, and similar things, that he painted therein, besides the portrait from life of Francesco himself, so excellent that he seems to lack nothing save speech. This panel was removed from that place on account of the siege, and placed for safety in the Sacristy of the Badia of Florence. In S. Spirito in the same city, for Tanai de' Nerli, he painted a panel with Our Lady, S. Martin, S. Nicholas, and S. Catherine; with a panel in the Chapel of the Rucellai in S. Pancrazio, and a Crucifix and two figures on a ground of gold in S. Raffaello. In front of the Sacristy of S. Francesco, without the Porta a S. Miniato, he made a God the Father, with a number of children. At Palco, a seat of the Frati del Zoccolo, without Prato, he painted a panel; and in the Audience Chamber of the Priori in that territory he executed a little panel containing the Madonna, S. Stephen, and S. John the Baptist, which has been much extolled. On the Canto al Mercatale, also in Prato, in a shrine opposite to the Nuns of S. Margherita, and near some houses belonging to them, he painted in fresco a very beautiful Madonna, with a choir of seraphim, on a ground of dazzling light. In this work, among other things, he showed art and beautiful judgment in a dragon that is at the feet of S. Margaret, which is so strange and horrible, that it is revealed to us as a true fount of venom, fire, and death; and the whole of the rest of the work is so fresh and vivacious in colouring, that it deserves infinite praise.
He also wrought certain things in Lucca, particularly a panel in a chapel of the Church of S. Ponziano, which belongs to the Monks of Monte Oliveto; in the centre of which chapel there is a niche containing a very beautiful S. Anthony in relief by the hand of Andrea Sansovino, a most excellent sculptor. Being invited to go to Hungary by King Matthias, Filippo refused, but made up for this by painting two very beautiful panels for that King in Florence, and sending them to him; and in one of these he made a portrait of the King, taken from his likeness on medals. He also sent certain works to Genoa; and beside the Chapel of the High-Altar in S. Domenico at Bologna, on the left hand, he painted a S. Sebastian on a panel, which was a thing worthy of much praise. For Tanai de' Nerli he executed another panel in S. Salvadore, without Florence; and for his friend Piero del Pugliese he painted a scene with little figures, executed with so much art and diligence that when another citizen besought him to make a second like it, he refused, saying that it was not possible to do it.
After these things he executed a very great work in Rome for the Neapolitan Cardinal, Olivieri Caraffa, at the request of the elder Lorenzo de' Medici, who was a friend of that Cardinal. While going thither for that purpose, he passed through Spoleto at the wish of Lorenzo, in order to give directions for the making of a marble tomb for his father Fra Filippo at the expense of Lorenzo, who had not been able to obtain his body from the people of Spoleto for removal to Florence. Filippo, therefore, made a beautiful design for the said tomb, and Lorenzo had it erected after that design (as has been told in another place), sumptuous and beautiful. Afterwards, having arrived in Rome, Filippo painted a chapel in the Church of the Minerva for the said Cardinal Caraffa, depicting therein scenes from the life of S. Thomas Aquinas, and certain most beautiful poetical compositions ingeniously imagined by himself, for he had a nature ever inclined to this. In the scene, then, wherein Faith has taken Infidelity captive, there are all the heretics and infidels. Hope has likewise overcome Despair, and so, too, there are many other Virtues that have subjugated the Vice that is their opposite. In a disputation is S. Thomas defending the Church "ex cathedra" against a school of heretics, and holding vanquished beneath him Sabellius, Arius, Averroes, and others, all clothed in graceful garments; of which scene we have in our book of drawings the original design by Filippo's own hand, with certain others by the same man, wrought with such mastery that they could not be bettered. There, too, is the scene when, as S. Thomas is praying, the Crucifix says to him, "Bene scripsisti de me, Thoma"; while a companion of the Saint, hearing that Crucifix thus speaking, is standing amazed and almost beside himself. In the panel is the Virgin receiving the Annunciation from Gabriel; and on the main wall there is her Assumption into Heaven, with the twelve Apostles round the sepulchre. The whole of this work was held, as it still is, to be very excellent and wrought perfectly for a work in fresco. It contains a portrait from life of the said Cardinal Olivieri Caraffa, Bishop of Ostia, who was buried in this chapel in the year 1511, and afterwards removed to the Piscopio in Naples.
THE LIBERATION OF S. PETER
(After the fresco by Filippo Lippi (Filippino).
Florence: S. Maria del Carmine)
Anderson
View larger image
Having returned to Florence, Filippo undertook to paint at his leisure the Chapel of the elder Filippo Strozzi in S. Maria Novella, and he actually began it; but, having finished the ceiling, he was compelled to return to Rome, where he wrought a tomb with stucco-work for the said Cardinal, and decorated with gesso a little chapel beside that tomb in a part of the same Church of the Minerva, together with certain figures, some of which were executed by his disciple, Raffaellino del Garbo. The chapel described above was valued by Maestro Lanzilago of Padua and by the Roman Antonio, known as Antoniasso, two of the best painters that were then in Rome, at 2,000 ducats of gold, without the cost of the blues and of the assistants. Having received this sum, Filippo returned to Florence, where he finished the aforesaid Chapel of the Strozzi, which was executed so well, and with so much art and design, that it causes all who see it to marvel, by reason of the novelty and variety of the bizarre things that are seen therein—armed men, temples, vases, helmet-crests, armour, trophies, spears, banners, garments, buskins, head-dresses, sacerdotal vestments, and other things—all executed in so beautiful a manner that they deserve the highest commendation. In this work there is the scene of Drusiana being restored to life by S. John the Evangelist, wherein we see most admirably expressed the marvel of the bystanders at beholding a man restore life to a dead woman by a mere sign of the cross; and the greatest amazement of all is seen in a priest, or rather philosopher, whichever he may be, who is clothed in ancient fashion and has a vase in his hand. In the same scene, likewise, among a number of women draped in various manners, there is a little boy, who, terrified by a small spaniel spotted with red, which has seized him with its teeth by one of his swathing-bands, is running round his mother and hiding himself among her clothes, and appears to be as much afraid of being bitten by the dog as his mother is awestruck and filled with a certain horror at the resurrection of Drusiana. Next to this, in the scene where S. John himself is being boiled in oil, we see the wrath of the judge, who is giving orders for the fire to be increased, and the flames reflected on the face of the man who is blowing at them; and all the figures are painted in beautiful and varied attitudes. On the other side is S. Philip in the Temple of Mars, compelling the serpent, which has slain the son of the King with its stench, to come forth from below the altar. In certain steps the painter depicted the hole through which the serpent issued from beneath the altar, and so well did he paint the cleft in one of the steps, that one evening one of Filippo's lads, wishing to hide something, I know not what, from the sight of someone who was knocking for admittance, ran up in haste in order to conceal it in the hole, being wholly deceived by it. Filippo also showed so much art in the serpent, that its venom, fetid breath, and fire, appear rather real than painted. Greatly extolled, too, is his invention in the scene of the Crucifixion of that Saint, for he imagined to himself, so it appears, that the Saint was stretched on the cross while it lay on the ground, and that afterwards the whole was drawn up and raised on high by means of ropes, cords, and poles; which ropes and cords are wound round certain fragments of antiquities, pieces of pillars, and bases, and pulled by certain ministers. On the other side the weight of the said cross and of the Saint who is stretched nude thereon is supported by two men, on the one hand by a man with a ladder, with which he is propping it up, and on the other hand by another with a pole, upholding it, while two others, setting a lever against the base and stem of the cross, are balancing its weight and seeking to place it in the hole made in the ground, wherein it had to stand upright. But why say more? It would not be possible for the work to be better either in invention or in drawing, or in any other respect whatsoever of industry or art. Besides this, it contains many grotesques and other things wrought in chiaroscuro to resemble marble, executed in strange fashion with invention and most beautiful drawing.
S. JOHN THE EVANGELIST RAISING DRUSIANA FROM THE DEAD
(After the fresco by Filippo Lippi [Filippino].
Florence: S. Maria Novella, Strozzi Chapel)
Anderson
View larger image
For the Frati Scopetini, also, at S. Donato, without Florence, which is called Scopeto and is now in ruins, he painted a panel with the Magi presenting their offerings to Christ, finished with great diligence, wherein he portrayed the elder Pier Francesco de' Medici, son of Lorenzo di Bicci, in the figure of an astrologer who is holding a quadrant in his hand, and likewise Giovanni, father of Signor Giovanni de' Medici, and another Pier Francesco, brother of that Signor Giovanni, and other people of distinction. In this work are Moors, Indians, costumes of strange shapes, and a most bizarre hut. In a loggia at Poggio a Cajano he began a Sacrifice in fresco for Lorenzo de' Medici, but it remained unfinished. And for the Nunnery of S. Geronimo, above the Costa di S. Giorgio in Florence, he began the panel of the high-altar, which was brought nearly to completion after his death by the Spaniard Alonzo Berughetta, but afterwards wholly finished by other painters, Alonzo having gone to Spain. In the Palazzo della Signoria he painted the panel of the hall where the Council of Eight held their sittings, and he made the design for another large panel, with its ornament, for the Sala del Consiglio; which design his death prevented him from beginning to put into execution, although the ornament was carved; which ornament is now in the possession of Maestro Baccio Baldini, a most excellent physician of Florence, and a lover of every sort of talent. For the Church of the Badia of Florence he made a very beautiful S. Jerome; and he began a Deposition from the Cross for the high-altar of the Friars of the Nunziata, but only finished the figures in the upper half of the picture, for, being overcome by a most cruel fever and by that contraction of the throat that is commonly known as quinsy, he died in a few days at the age of forty-five.
Thereupon, having ever been courteous, affable, and kindly, he was lamented by all those who had known him, and particularly by the youth of his noble native city, who, in their public festivals, masques, and other spectacles, ever availed themselves, to their great satisfaction, of the ingenuity and invention of Filippo, who has never had an equal in things of that kind. Nay, he was so excellent in all his actions, that he blotted out the stain (if stain it was) left to him by his father—blotted it out, I say, not only by the excellence of his art, wherein he was inferior to no man of his time, but also by the modesty and regularity of his life, and, above all, by his courtesy and amiability; and how great are the force and power of such qualities to conciliate the minds of all men without exception, is only known to those who either have experienced or are experiencing it. Filippo was buried by his sons in S. Michele Bisdomini, on April 13, 1505; and while he was being borne to his tomb all the shops in the Via de' Servi were closed, as is done sometimes for the obsequies of great men.
Among the disciples of Filippo, who all failed by a great measure to equal him, was Raffaellino del Garbo, who made many works, as will be told in the proper place, although he did not justify the opinions and hopes that were conceived of him while Filippo was alive and Raffaellino himself still a young man. The fruits, indeed, are not always equal to the blossoms that are seen in the spring. Nor did any great success come to Niccolò Zoccolo, otherwise known as Niccolò Cartoni, who was likewise a disciple of Filippo, and painted at Arezzo the wall that is over the altar of S. Giovanni Decollato; a little panel, passing well done, in S. Agnesa; a panel over a lavatory in the Abbey of S. Fiora, containing a Christ who is asking for water from the woman of Samaria; and many other works, which, since they were commonplace, are not mentioned.
THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI
(After the panel by Filippo Lippi (Filippino).
Florence: Uffizi, 1257)
Alinari
View larger image
Even as many are assisted by fortune without being endowed with much talent, so, on the contrary, there is an infinite number of able men who are persecuted by an adverse and hostile fortune; whence it is clearly manifest that she acknowledges as her children those who depend upon her without the aid of any talent, since it pleases her to exalt by her favour certain men who would never be known through their own merit; which is seen in Pinturicchio of Perugia, who, although he made many works and was assisted by various helpers, nevertheless had a much greater name than his works deserved. However, he was a man who had much practice in large works, and ever kept many assistants to aid him in his labours. Now, having worked at many things in his early youth under his master Pietro da Perugia,[1] receiving a third of all that was earned, he was summoned to Siena by Cardinal Francesco Piccolomini to paint the library made by Pope Pius II in the Duomo of that city. It is true, indeed, that the sketches and cartoons for all the scenes that he painted there were by the hand of Raffaello da Urbino, then a youth, who had been his companion and fellow-disciple under the same Pietro, whose manner the said Raffaello had mastered very well. One of these cartoons is still to be seen at the present day in Siena, and some of the sketches, by the hand of Raffaello, are in our book.