
Matteo di Giovanni, The Crucifixion
Photo courtesy of Dave Penman (All Rights Reserved)
Details
- Country House
- Mells Manor
- Title(s)
- The Crucifixion
- Medium and support
- Tempera and gold leaf on wood
- Dimensions
- Overall height: 37 cm, Overall width: 70 cm
- Artist
- Matteo di Giovanni (c.1428-1495)
- Catalogue Number
- MM12
Bibliography
John Pope-Hennessy, 'A Crucifixion by Matteo di Giovanni', The Burlington Magazine, vol. 102, 1960, pp. 63–7
Erica Susanna Trimpi, '“Johannem Baptistam Hieronymo aequalem et non maiorem”: A predella for Matteo di Giovanni’s Placidi Altarpiece', The Burlington Magazine, vol. 125, 1983, pp. 457–67
Erica Susanna Trimpi, 'A Reattribution and Another Possible Addition to Matteo di Giovanni’s Placidi Altarpiece', The Burlington Magazine, vol. 127, 1985, pp. 363–7
Erica Susanna Trimpi, Matteo di Giovanni: Documents and a Critical Catalogue of his Panel Paintings, Ann Arbor : University of Michigan, 1987
Keith Christiansen, Laurence B. Kanter and Carl Brandon Strehlke, Painting in Renaissance Siena 1420–1500, exh. cat., New York : Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1988, no. 49b, pp. 274–8 (entry by Laurence Kanter)
Oliver Garnett, 'The Letters and Collection of William Graham: Pre-Raphaelite Patron and Pre-Raphael Collector', The Walpole Society, vol. 62, 2000, d202, p. 324, as Matteo di Giovanni (WG inventory 261: £100/sale 125, bought Agnew [3910] 30 guineas)
Dora Sallay, 'Nuove considerazioni su due tavole d’altare di Matteo di Giovanni: la struttura della pala Placidi di San Domenico e della pala degli Innocenti di Sant’Agostino a Siena', Prospettiva, vol. 112, 2003, pp. 76–93
Renaissance Siena: Art for a City, ed. Luke Syson, exh. cat., London : National Gallery, 2007, no. 35, pp. 163–73 (entry by Luke Syson)
Description
This panel has long been known to students of Sienese art and Matteo di Giovanni’s authorship has never been doubted. It was associated by Sir John Pope-Hennessy (1960) with two other panels by Matteo di Giovanni, both in the Art Institute, Chicago, and conjecturally connected by him with Matteo’s ferocious Massacre of the Innocents of 1482 (Sant’Agostino, Siena). However, it was established firmly by Trimpi (1983) that it was the central panel of the predella of the Placidi altarpiece painted by Matteo for the church of San Domenico, Siena, and documented to 1476. The predella comprises three horizontal narrative scenes: flanking the Crucifixion at the viewer’s left is the Dream of St Jerome and at the viewer’s right St Augustine’s Vision of St Jerome. The side panels in Chicago are 3–4 centimetres narrower than the Crucifixion whose importance is thus emphasised. Luke Syson informs the present writer that the Mells panel is in much better condition than its companions. The three narratives were separated by two upright figures, St Augustine and St Vincent Ferrer (both in the Lindenau Museum, Altenburg, standing in simulated niches). The appurtenance of all these now separate panels to the predella was confirmed by technical examination at the National Gallery, London, in 2007, which established that all were painted on the same plank, subsequently divided.1
The treatment of the Crucifixion in this panel is well analysed and described by Syson:
Matteo di Giovanni was an inventive and independent-minded painter. His style shows something of Donatello’s asperity and he seems to have learnt much from the painter-sculptor Vecchietta. His bright colours and sharp forms make him recognisable. He was, perhaps, the toughest-minded Sienese painter of his generation.