Title: By: Olga Rukovets and Maria SanchezPeraza
1He was not handsome, said Petrarch.
Giotto di Bondone
By Olga Rukovets and Maria Sanchez-Peraza
1267-1337
2Early Life
- Born, about 1266, in Vespignano, near Florence
- Father- small land farmer
- first period of his artistic life, commissions
only from religious authorities (Franciscan
Order) - No history of early years
- 1280, supposedly started studying under Cimabue
- No surviving painting documented as being by him
- Earliest workBasilica of San Francesco dAssisi
3Known Works
- Worked for Bardi's and Peruzzi's, wealthy
Florentines - Worked in the basilica of Sant'Antonio and made
frescoes for Scrovegni Chapel - Decorated the tribune of St. Peter's and the
polyptych that is preserved today in the
Pinacoteca Vaticana in Rome - Head of bottega (studio)had collaborators
- 1334, Florence honored Giotto with title of
Magnus Magister (Great Master) - 1337 (January 8) Giotto dies in Florence
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5A Real Renaissance Man
- Very versatilesculptor, painter, and architect
- Famous in his own time, and even became rich
- Started humanism in art
- Lacked technical knowledge
- Respected by Renaissance contemporaries
- In those times, figurative art rose again to its
natural force with Giotto. Dante - Broke all links with Middle Ages?foundations of
modern painting - Of new merchant and entrepreneur class
6Saint Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata
- Part of a series of 28 paintings
- Expresses gentle spirit of St. Francis
- More emphasis on facial expressions than on
landscape - Portrayal of St. Francis historically accurate
and creates likeness between him and Jesus - Gathers realistic details and combines them with
a spiritual theme - Smaller images along bottom present St. Francis
- Strays from Medieval balance and symmetry
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8The Lamentation of Christ
- Giotto does not represent the scene as it might
have happened - Varied size of figures for spatial purposes
- Realistically portrays grief felt by each figure
- Emphasis on landscape- brings horizon to our eye
level - Mary and Jesus as mother and son
- Even the angels are humanized and individualized
- Grieving John the Evangelist as image of
universal despair
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10Influence
- "He converted the art of painting from Greek to
Latin and brought in the modern era-Cennino
Cennini - Credited with creating first images of humanity
- direct approach to human experience
- One of the first to employ vivid colors
- Put depth and perspective into paintings (The
Lamentation) - influence on Florentine painting stemmed from his
ability to bring three-dimensionality to works
11Influence
The angry glare keeps the children and pigeons
away
- Recognized during his time and admired by the
likes of Dante, Boccaccio, Petrarch and Cennini - Following generation of painters greatly
influenced by his approach to painting (i.e.,
Masaccio) - recognized as first genius of art in the Italian
Renaissance - Begun artistic revolution based on
actuality/reality - Regarded as founder of central tradition of
Western painting - "Once Cimabue thought to hold the field as
painter Giotto now is all the rage, dimming the
luster of the other's fame. Dante
12Bibliography
Giotto. Online Available http//www.giotto.com/g
iotto/giotto.html , March 4, 2004. Giotto
1267-1337, Italy. Online Available
www.nelepets.com/art/artists/g/Giottobio.htm ,
March 4, 2004. Giotto di Bondone. The Catholic
Encyclopedia, 2003. Online Available www.newadve
nt.or/cathen/06565a.htm, March 3, 2004. Horing,
Thomas. Greatest Works of Art of Western
Civilization. New York Barnes Noble Books,
1997. Olgas Gallery Giotto. Online Available
http//abcgallery.com/G/giotto/giotto.html ,
March 3, 2004. Pioch, Nicolas. Giotto di
Bondone. Online Available http//www.ibiblio.org
/wm/paint/auth/giotto/ , March 3, 2004. Sporre,
Dennis J. The Creative Impulse An Introduction
to the Arts. New Jersey Prentice Hall, 1993.