Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors and Architects (Vol. 1-10). Giorgio Vasari

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Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors and Architects (Vol. 1-10) - Giorgio Vasari

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LIFE OF NANNI D'ANTONIO DI BANCO, SCULPTOR OF FLORENCE

       LUCA DELLA ROBBIA

       LIFE OF LUCA DELLA ROBBIA, SCULPTOR OF FLORENCE

       PAOLO UCCELLO

       LIFE OF PAOLO UCCELLO, PAINTER OF FLORENCE

       LORENZO GHIBERTI

       LIFE OF LORENZO GHIBERTI [LORENZO DI CIONE GHIBERTI OR LORENZO DI BARTOLUCCIO GHIBERTI],PAINTER OF FLORENCE

       MASOLINO DA PANICALE

       LIFE OF MASOLINO DA PANICALE, PAINTER

       PARRI SPINELLI

       LIFE OF PARRI SPINELLI, PAINTER OF AREZZO

       MASACCIO

       LIFE OF MASACCIO, PAINTER OF SAN GIOVANNI IN VALDARNO

       FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI

       LIFE OF FILIPPO BRUNELLESCHI [FILIPPO DI SER BRUNELLESCO], SCULPTOR AND ARCHITECT

       DONATO

       LIFE OF DONATO [DONATELLO], SCULPTOR OF FLORENCE

       MICHELOZZO MICHELOZZI

       LIFE OF MICHELOZZO MICHELOZZI, SCULPTOR AND ARCHITECT OF FLORENCE

       FOOTNOTES

      BERNA

       Table of Contents

       MADONNA AND CHILD MADONNA AND CHILD (After the painting by Berna Sanese [da Siena]. Asciano: Church of S. Francesco) Burton View larger image

      LIFE OF BERNA

      PAINTER OF SIENA

       Table of Contents

      If those who labour to become excellent in some art did not very often have the thread of life cut by death in their best years, I have no doubt that many intellects would arrive at that rank which is most desired both by them and by the world. But the short life of men and the bitterness of various accidents, which threaten them from all sides, snatch them from us sometimes prematurely, as could be seen in poor young Berna of Siena, who, although he died young, nevertheless left so many works that he appears to have lived very long; and those that he left were made in such a way, that it may well be believed from this showing that he would have become excellent and rare if he had not died so soon. In two chapels of S. Agostino in Siena there are seen some little pictures with figures in fresco, by his hand; and in the church, on a wall now pulled down in order to make chapels there, was a scene of a youth led to execution, as well made as it could possibly be imagined, there being seen expressed in it the pallor and fear of death, in so lifelike a manner that he deserved therefore the highest praise. Beside the said youth was a friar painted in a very fine attitude, and, in short, everything in that work is so vividly wrought that it appears, indeed, that in this work Berna imagined this event as most horrible, as it must be, and full of most bitter and cruel terror, seeing that he portrayed it so well with the brush that the same scene appearing in reality would not stir greater emotion.

      In the city of Cortona, also, besides many other works scattered in many places in that city, he painted the greater part of the vaulting and of the walls of the Church of S. Margherita, where to-day is the seat of the Frati Zoccolanti. From Cortona he went to Arezzo in the year 1369, exactly when the Tarlati, formerly Lords of Pietramala, had caused Moccio, a sculptor and architect of Siena, to finish the Convent and the body of the Church of S. Agostino in that city, in the lesser aisles of which many citizens had caused chapels and tombs to be made for their families; and there, in the Chapel of S. Jacopo, Berna painted in fresco some little scenes of the life of that Saint, and especially vivid is the story of Marino the swindler, who, having by reason of greed of gold given his soul to the Devil and made thereunto a written contract in his own hand, is making supplication to the Saint to free him from this promise, while a Devil, showing him the contract, is pressing him with the greatest insistence in the world. In all these figures Berna expressed the emotions of the mind with much vivacity, and particularly in the face of Marino, which shows on one side fear, and on the other the faith and trust that make him hope for his liberation from S. James, although opposite there is seen the Devil, hideous to a marvel, who is warmly speaking and declaring his rights to the Saint, who, after having instilled into Marino extreme penitence for his sin and for the promise made, is liberating him and leading him back to God. This same story, says Lorenzo Ghiberti, by the hand of the same man, was in a chapel of the Capponi, dedicated to S. Nicholas, in S. Spirito at Florence, before that church was burnt down. After this work, then, Berna painted a great Crucifix in a chapel of the Vescovado of Arezzo for Messer Guccio di Vanni Tarlati da Pietramala, and at the foot of the Cross a Madonna, S. John the Evangelist, and S. Francis, in most sorrowful attitudes, together with a S. Michelagnolo, with so much diligence that it merits no small praise, and above all by reason of having been so well preserved that it appears made only yesterday. Below, moreover, is the portrait of the said Guccio, kneeling in armour at the foot of the Cross. In the Pieve of the same city, in the Chapel of the Paganelli, he painted many stories of Our Lady, and portrayed there after the life the Blessed Rinieri, a holy man and prophet of that house, who is giving alms to many beggars who are round him. In S. Bartolommeo, also, he painted some stories of the Old Testament and the story of the Magi; and in the Church of Spirito Santo he painted some stories of S. John the Evangelist, and in certain figures the portrait of himself and of many of his friends, nobles of that city.

       BARNA: THE AGONY IN THE GARDEN BERNA: THE AGONY IN THE GARDEN (San Gimignano. Fresco) View larger image

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