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For the village near Livorno, see Sassetta, Tuscany
Stefano di Giovanni di Consolo, known as il Sassetta (c. 1392–1450) was a Tuscan painter of the Renaissance, and a significant figure of the Sienese School. While working within the Sienese tradition, he innovated the style by introducing elements derived from the decorative Gothic style and the realism of contemporary Florentine innovators as Masaccio.
Life and Works
The name Sassetta has been associated with him, mistakenly, only since the 18th century but is now generally used for this artist. The date and birthplace of Sassetta are not known. Some say he was born in Siena although there is also a hypothesis that he was born in Cortona. His father, Giovanni, is called da Cartona which possibly means that Cortona was the artist's birthplace. The meaning of his nickname Sassetta is obscure and is not cited in documents of his time but appears in sources from the eighteenth century.
Sassetta was probably trained alongside artists like Benedetto di Bindo and Gregorio di Cecco but he had a style all of his own. He achieved a high level of technical refinement and was aware of artistic innovations of talented painters in Florence such as Gentile da Fabriano and Masolino. His work differs from the late Gothic style of many of his Sienese contemporaries.
His first certain work, which originally had his signature, is the Arte della Lana altarpiece, (1423–1426) fragments of which are now divided among various private and public collections.
The Madonna of the Snow altarpiece for the Siena Cathedral was a prestigious commission for Sassetta, and is considered his second major work. Not only does he excel at infusing his figures with a natural light that convincingly molds their shape, he also has an amazing handle on spatial relationships, creating cohesive and impressive work. From this point on, under Gothic influence, Sassetta's style increases its decorative nature. The polyptych done by Sassetta in San Domenico at Cortona (around 1437) depicts scenes from the legend of St. Anthony the Abbot. He shows great skill in narration through his painting as well as combining a sophisticated color palette and rhythmic compositions.
Francesco di Giorgio e di Lorenzo, better known as Vecchietta, is said to have been his apprentice.
He died from pneumonia contracted while decorating the Assumption fresco on the Porta Romana of Siena. The work was finished by his pupil Sano di Pietro.
Many consider Sassetta's fusing of traditional and contemporary elements as integral to the move from the Gothic to the Renaissance style of painting in Siena.
A Miracle of the Eucharist
Sassetta was a fiercely pious man. The painting is about the "marriage of righteousness and violence" and the "consequences of sinfulness, the perils of feigning faith and the power of God."
The figure in black in the painting is an unbeliever, who has been found out in the process of receiving Communion. The officiating priest offers him the host on a plate, which is pictured miraculously spurting blood. The unbeliever has been struck dead instantly, and the creature above his face is a tiny black devil which has swooped down to snatch away his soul to the depths of Hell. The other men pictured are Carmelite monks, caught in expressions of shock, amazement and disgust. The painting is a "carefully staged, meticulously created illusion" which commemorates the Miracle of Bolsena which is said to have taken place in 1263.
Sassetta's Altarpiece of the Eucharist was later divided between three museums (British, Hungarian and Italian), the Vatican, and a private collection.
The Borgo San Sepolcro Altarpiece
The altarpiece was originally painted in Siena, and transported to Sansepolcro for to be placed in the church of San Francesco. In October 1900 the Berenson family purchased three panels created by Stefano di Giovanni. The Berensons' collection consisted of St. Francis in Glory, flanked by the standing Blessed Ranieri and St. John the Baptist, which scholars determined are only a part of a complex altar which had now become scattered among twelve collections throughout Europe and North America. It is generally accepted by the art historical community that Sassetta's San Francesco altarpiece was one of the largest and most expensive of the Quattrocento. The fact that it was produced by a Sienese artist in Siena, and shipped to the Tiber Valley town in late spring 1444 also speaks to Sassetta's fame in his time period.
Bernard Berenson bequeathed many of Sassetta's painting from his Florence Villa to Harvard University, in what became the Center for Italian Renaissance Studies in Florence. A 3D computer-assisted reconstruction of the altarpiece's surviving parts is featured in Sassetta: The Borgo San Sepolcro Altarpiece, edited by Machtelt Israels and released in 2009.
Controversy
There is some contention among art historians over which Sienese masters were directly responsible for which paintings. It has been questioned whether the Scenes from the life of St. Anthony of Egypt are rightly attributed to Sassetta, and critics such as Donald Bruce believe that artists of near-equal talent, such as the Griselda master, also deserve attention for their achievements in art at this period.
Selected works
Meeting of The Meeting of St. Anthony the Great and St. Paul of Thebes (c. 1440), tempera on wood, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., USA
Saint Thomas Aquinas's Vision before the Cross, (1423), Pinacoteca Vaticana
Saint Thomas Aquinas inspired by the Holy Spirit, tempera on wood, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
Madonna of the Snows Altarpiece (c. 1430–1432), Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
A predella of three works at the Detroit Institute of Arts
San Domenico da Cortona Polyptych (c. 1434), Diocesan Museum, Cortona, Italy
The Journey of the Magi (1435) Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA
Saint Anthony the Hermit Tortured by Devils, Pinacoteca Nazionale, Siena
Virgin and Child Adored by Six Angels (1437–44), Louvre Museum, Paris, France
The Burning of a Heretic (1423), National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia
Last Supper (1423), Pinacoteca Nazionale, Siena
Ecstasy of Saint Francis (1437–44), Villa I Tatti, Settignano, Italy
The Miracle of the Eucharist, Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, United Kingdom
Saint Francis receiving Stigmata (1437–44), National Gallery, London, United Kingdom
Mystic Marriage of St. Francis (c. 1450), Musée Condé, Chantilly, France
References
Sources
Italian Paintings of the Fifteenth Century. 2003 Judy Metro, National Gallery of Art, Oxford University Press: Oxford, New York p. 621.
Andrew Graham-Dixon, Paper Museum: Writings about Paintings, mostly (New York : Knopf, 1997), 33–36.
Miklós Boskovits; National Gallery of Art (U.S.); et al., Italian paintings of the fifteenth century (Washington : National Gallery of Art ; New York, 2003), 621–625.
Machtelt Israels, ed. Sassetta: The Borgo San Sepolcro Altarpiece. 2 vols. Florence: Villa I Tatti, 2009.
Fabrizio Nevola. "Reviews" Renaissance Quarterly (University of Chicago Press 2010). Vol. 63, No. 2, p. 589–591.
Donald Bruce, Sienese Painting at the London National Gallery. Contemporary Review; Winter2007, Vol. 289 Issue 1687, p. 481.
Luciano Bellosi, Sassetta e i pittori toscani tra XIII e XV secolo, a cura di Luciano Bellosi e Alessandro Angelini, Studio per edizioni scelte, Firenze 1986
B. Berenson, Sassetta, Firenze 1946
Enzo Carli, Sassetta's Borgo San Sepolcro Altarpiece, in: Burlington Magazine 43, 1951, ss. 145
Enzo Carli, Sassetta e il «Maestro dell'Osservanza», Milano 1957
Enzo Carli, I Pittori senesi, Milano 1971
J. Pope-Hennessy, Sassetta, Londra 1939
J. Pope-Hennessy, Rethinking Sassetta, in: Burlington Magazine 98, 1956, ss. 364
Federico Zeri, Towards a Reconstruction of Sassetta's Arte della Lana Triptych, in Burlington Magazine 98, 1956, ss. 36
External links
Media related to Sassetta at Wikimedia Commons
NGA
Sassoferrato is a town and comune of the province of Ancona in the Marche region of central-eastern Italy. It is one of I Borghi più belli d'Italia ("The most beautiful villages of Italy").
History
Between Sassoferrato and Arcevia was the hill called Civitalba from the name of the ancient city there.
To the south of the town lie the ruins of the ancient Sentinum, on the Via Flaminia.
The castle above the town is mentioned from the 11th century; the town belonged to the House of Este from 1208, later to the Atti family, becoming a free municipality in 1460 after the assassination of Luigi degli Atti.
Geography
Sassoferrato borders with the municipalities of Arcevia, Fabriano, Genga, Serra Sant'Abbondio (PU), Pergola (PU), Costacciaro (PG, Umbria) and Scheggia e Pascelupo (PG, Umbria).
Frazioni
A frazione (plural: frazioni) is a type of subdivision of a comune (municipality) in Italy:
Notable people
Bartolo da Sassoferrato (1313–1359)
Cardinal Alessandro Oliva (1407–1463)
Niccolò Perotti (1430–1480), humanist
Antonio Perotti (1535–1582), captain named the "Paladin of Italy" by Alessandro Farnese
Pietro Paolo Agabiti (1470–1540), painter and architect
Pandolfo Collenuccio (1444–1504), man of letters
Giovani Battista Salvi (1609–1685), Italian Baroque painter, called "the Sassoferrato"
Baldassarre Olimpo degli Alessandri (1480? – 1540?), poet
References
External links
Media related to Sassoferrato at Wikimedia Commons
Official website (in Italian)
Official Tourism website
Scheggia may refer to:
Scheggia e Pascelupo, a comune (municipality) in the Province of Perugia in the Italian region Umbria.
Scheggia Pass, a pass in the Italian region Umbria that divides the Northern and Central Apennines.
Giovanni di ser Giovanni Guidi known as Scheggia (b. 1406, San Giovanni Valdarno, d. 1486, Firenze)
Sebastiaen Vrancx, Sebastiaan Vrancx or Sebastian Vranckx (pronounced [ˈvrɑŋs]; 22 January 1573 – 19 May 1647) was a Flemish Baroque painter, draughtsman and designer of prints who is mainly known for his battle scenes, a genre that he pioneered in Netherlandish painting. He also created landscapes with mythological and allegorical scenes, scenes with robbers, village scenes and celebrations in cities. He was a gifted figure painter who was regularly invited to paint the staffage in compositions of fellow painters. As an active member of a local chamber of rhetoric, he wrote comedies and a number of poems. He was further captain of the Antwerp civil militia schutterij.
Life
Sebastiaen Vrancx was baptized on 22 January 1573 in the St James Church in Antwerp. His father Jan was a merchant. His mother was Barbara Coutereau.