President and Fellows of Harvard College
Transcript
President and Fellows of Harvard College
© President and Fellows of Harvard College 1 of 29 © President and Fellows of Harvard College 2 of 29 © President and Fellows of Harvard College 3 of 29 © President and Fellows of Harvard College 4 of 29 © President and Fellows of Harvard College 5 of 29 secondary view © President and Fellows of Harvard College 6 of 29 detail of head in profile © President and Fellows of Harvard College 7 of 29 detail of hair © President and Fellows of Harvard College 8 of 29 detail of head in profile © President and Fellows of Harvard College 9 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 10 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 11 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 12 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 13 of 29 detail of right arm © President and Fellows of Harvard College 14 of 29 detail of right arm © President and Fellows of Harvard College 15 of 29 detail of drapery © President and Fellows of Harvard College 16 of 29 detail of drapery © President and Fellows of Harvard College 17 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 18 of 29 detail of hair © President and Fellows of Harvard College 19 of 29 detail of head © President and Fellows of Harvard College 20 of 29 detail of hair © President and Fellows of Harvard College 21 of 29 detail of hair © President and Fellows of Harvard College 22 of 29 detail of hair © President and Fellows of Harvard College Gallery Text One of the grandest building projects in early 23 of 29 Renaissance Florence was the construction of a new cathedral in 1296. It was a civic as much as a religious undertaking, and the monument captured the ambition and spirit of the city. The building and its impressive marble facade were designed by Arnolfo di Cambio, Florence’s most celebrated sculptor and architect at that time. Although work progressed quickly, Arnolfo died with barely a third of the facade realized. A sixteenth-century drawing indicates that this sculpture, essentially a high relief, was placed above the main entrance of the cathedral, flanking a large statue of the Virgin and Child that was at the center of the tympanum. The skillful handling of the marble, the deeply undercut drapery, and brilliant drill work, especially in the angel’s hair, reveal the close observation of, and renewed interest in, ancient sculpture that was an essential underpinning of the Renaissance. This marble is the only sculpture from the original facade that exists outside Europe. Identification and Creation Object Number 1957.57.A People Arnolfo di Cambio, Italian (1232 - 1302) Title Censing Angel Classification Sculpture Work Type 24 of 29 figurine, sculpture Date c. 1294-1302 Culture Italian Location Level 2, Room 2460, East Arcade View this object's location on our interactive map Physical Descriptions Medium Marble Dimensions 115.6 x 25.5 x 50.5 cm (45 1/2 x 10 1/16 x 19 7/8 in.) 310 lb. Provenance Paolo Paolini, (Rome?), sold; to [Leopoldo Aretini, Florence] sold; to Arthur Kingsley Porter, February 5, 1921, Cambridge, MA, by descent; to Lucy Wallace Porter, 1933; gift to Fogg Art Museum, 1957. Acquisition and Rights Credit Line Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum, Gift of Mrs. Arthur Kingsley Porter in memory of her husband Accession Year 1957 25 of 29 Object Number 1957.57.A Division European and American Art Contact [email protected] Publication History Pietro Toesca, "Marmi della scuola di Nicola Pisano", Rassegna d'Arte (1917), IV, pp. 93-6. p. 96, fig. 5 George Vitzthum and W. F. Volbach, Die Malerei und Plastik des Mittelalters in Italien (Wildpark-Potsdam, 1924), pp. 159-60, fig.121 Raimond Van Marle, "L'Annonciation dans la Sculpture monumentale de Pise et de Sienne", Revue de l'art ancien et moderne (1934), LXV, pp. 11-26. p. 121 Hagen Keller, "Der Bildhauer Arnolfo di Cambio und seine Werkstatt", Jahrbuch der Preussischen Kunstsammlungen (1935), LVI, pp. 22-43, 35-38. p. 38, n. 1 Georg Swarzenski, "The Arts of the Middle Ages", Art News (1940), XXXVIII, p. 12 Martin Weinberger, "The First Facade of the Cathedral of Florence", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes (1940-1941), 4, pp. 67-79; p. 69, fig. 14b Arts of the Middle Ages, exh. cat., Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Boston, MA, 1940), no. 156, repr. in b/w as pl. XXII Piera Bettini, "Tre sconosciute sculture arnolfiane", Rivista d'arte (1950), XXVI, pp. 185-192; p. 187, fig. 2 Felton Lewis Gibbons, "Arnolfo di Cambio Censing Angel", Fogg Art Museum Annual Report 1955-1957 26 of 29 (1956-1957), pp.18-24. cover (detail of head), p. 19 Stefano Bottari, "Arnolfo di Cambio", Dizionario biografico degli italiani (Rome, 1962), IV, pp. 289-290. p. 290 Angiola Maria Romanini, Arnolfo di Cambio e lo "stil novo" del gotico italiano (Milan, 1969), pp. 108, 138 n. 144 John Pope-Hennessey, Italian Gothic Sculpture (London, 1970), p. 183 "Gothic Sculpture in American Collections: The Checklist: I: The New England Museums", GESTA, ed. Dorothy W. Gillerman (1980), vol. XIX, no. 2, no. 66, repr. Kristin A. Mortimer, Harvard University Art Museums: A Guide to the Collections, Harvard University Art Museums/Abbeville Press (Cambridge, MA; New York, NY, 1985), no. 143, p. 126, repr. Anita F. Moskowitz, "Censing Angel", Gothic Sculpture in America: The New England Museums, ed. Dorothy W. Gillerman (New York - London, 1989), I, pp. 168-69 Anita F. Moskowitz, Gothic Sculpture in America, I: The New England Museums, ed. Dorothy W. Gillerman, Garland Publishing, Inc. (New York, 1989), no. 134 pp. 168-169, repr. Karen Christian, "Arnolfo di Cambio's sculptural project for the Duomo facade in Florence. A study in style and context" (1990), pp. 14, 164-65, 220 fig. 20 Anita F. Moskowitz, "A Neglected Tuscan Figure in the Medieval Collection", The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art (1994), 81, p. 369, 370 fig. 11 Enrica Neri Lusanna, "La decorazione e le sculture arnolfiane dell'antica facciata", La cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore a Firenze (Florence, 1995), II, pp. 31-72. pp. 39-40, figs. 39 and 40 27 of 29 Joachim Poeschke, Die Skulptur des Mittlealters in Italien, Hirmer (Munich, Germany, 1998-2000), vol. 2, p. 100, repr. in b/w as abb. 28 Anita F. Moskowitz, Italian Gothic Sculpture c. 1250 - c. 1400, Cambridge University Press (U.K.) (Cambridge, U.K., 2001), pp. 64-66, p. 65, fig. 80, repr. in b/w Mario Scalini, L'arte a Firenze nell'età di Dante (Florence, 2004), p. 129, n. 37 Enrica Neri Lusanna, "'Venustius et honorabilius templum'", Arnolfo alle origini del rinascimento fiorentino (Florence, 2005), pp. 201-223. pp. 205, 206, 210 fig. 15, 211 fig. 19 Stephan Wolohojian, Arnolfo alle origini del rinascimento fiorentino, exh. cat., ed. Enrica Neri Lusanna (Florence, 2005), pp. 254-255; ill. as cat. no. 2.13 Max Seidel, "Arnolfo e il suo rapporto con Nicola Pisano", Arnolfo di Cambio e la sua epoca. Costruire, scolpire, dipingere, decorare, ed. Vittorio Franchetti Pardo (Rome, 2006), pp. 57-64. pp. 58 fig. 3, 59, 60 fig. 7 (detail), 61 Margaret Haines, David Friedman, and Julian Gardner, ed., Arnolfo's Moment: Acts of an International Conference, Florence, Villa I Tatti, May 26-27, 2005 , Leo S. Olschki (Florence, 2009), p. 44, repr. in color as plate IX and in b/w p. 21 as fig. 21 Exhibition History Arts of the Middle Ages, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Boston, 02/17/1940 - 03/24/1940 Arnolfo alle origini del rinascimento fiorentino, Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Florence, 12/21/2005 04/21/2006 Re-View: S422-423 Western Art of the Middle Ages & 28 of 29 Renaissance, Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Cambridge, 08/16/2008 - 06/18/2011 32Q: 2460 East Arcade, Harvard Art Museums, 11/01/2014 Subjects and Contexts Google Art Project This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of European and American Art at [email protected] Generated on September 29, 2016 at 12:51pm 29 of 29
Documenti analoghi
President and Fellows of Harvard College
dell'arte (2012), vol. 36, pp. 335-40
Stephen J. Campbell, Ornament & Illusion: Carlo Crivelli