 |
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
| |
|
Art Sender offers exclusive discounta and prizes to member from time to time. Join here to stay informed
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
|
| |
|
Artist Biography
Gentile da Fabriano (1370-1427),
Italian
Gentile
di Niccolò di Giovanni Massi, born in Fabriano in the Italian Marches, was
the son of a cloth merchant. He became a major Italian figure in the
International Gothic style. No doubt he must have encountered Sienese art
at an early age, but all evidence suggests that he was trained in the
great cultural centers of Milan and Verona.
Gentile was, in fact, the most sought-after and famous artist in Italy
during the first quarter of the 15th century. This can be seen from his
travels to great cities, such as Venice, Florence, and Rome. It can also
be deducted from the large number of pupils he attracted, including
Pisanello,
Jacopo Bellini, and
Fra Angelico,
his greatest heir.
A typical example of Gentile’s early work is the Polyptych of the
Coronation of the Virgin. This was painted for a convent at Val
Romita, near Fabriano. It is now in the Brera Gallery in Milan.
Virgin and
Child with St. Nicholas and St. Catherine is another important
example of Gentile’s early work. In particular it reveals the Sienese and
Lombard elements in his training. The painting has all the beautiful
characteristics of late International Gothic Art.
In 1408, Gentile was called to Venice to paint some
frescoes (unfortunately destroyed) in the Doge’s Palace. His arrival in
Venice is the first officially recorded date we have concerning Gentile.
He remained there until at least 1414. There he earned great fame. One
of his Venetian pupils was
Jacopo
Bellini, who became a famous painter in his own right – although
later overshadowed by his sons
Giovanni
Gentile.
Nothing of Gentile da Fabriano’s Venetian work survives, nor of the
commissions he carried out for the Malatesta in Brescia, for the Pope in
the Lateran Basilica in Rome and for clients in Siena.
After Brescia, in 1419 the painter settled in Florence where the
generation of Donatello, Ghilberti, and Brunelleschi was working.
Gentile da Fabriano’s work is stylish and elegant, making much use of
gold backgrounds and countless precious details. His great technical
skill hints at a new interest in classical sculpture.
In 1423, he produced his best-known work, the monumental
Adoration
of the Magi for the Strozzi Chapel in Santa Trinita and now
in the Uffizi. In 1425, Adoration of the Magi was followed by the
Quaratesi triptych (now in separate pieces and kept in various
museums). See:
A Miracle
of St. Nicholas and
St.
Nicholas and the Three Gold Balls, both are the panels from
the predella of the Quaratesi triptych.
After his stay in Siena and Orvieto (where he painted
the fresco of the Virgin and Child in the cathedral) in January 1427 he
moved to Rome. There he started the ambitious fresco decoration of the
central nave of the Basilica of St. John Lateran, which remained
unfinished when he died in August that year. His assistant and pupil
Pisanello took charge of the project and his workshop, assimilating the
artistic legacy of Gentile.
Gentile da
Fabriano Oil Paintings
Reproductions:
Four Saints of the Quaratesi Polyptych 80cm x 60cm (32" x 24") $289 - Ciurlionis Museum The Adoration of the Magi 75cm x 60cm (30" x 24") $329 - Ciurlionis Museum The Presentation in the Temple 50cm x 120cm (20" x 48") $309 - The Haggin Museum, Stockton
For more
titles, please contact
Us.
|