Sienese School
The Sienese School of painting flourished in Siena, Italy between the 13th and 15th centuries and for a time rivaled Florence, though it was more conservative, being inclined towards the decorative beauty and elegant grace of late Gothic art. Its most important representatives include Duccio, whose work shows Byzantine influence; his pupil Simone Martini; Pietro and Ambrogio Lorenzetti; Domenico and Taddeo di Bartolo; Sassetta and Matteo di Giovanni. Unlike the naturalistic Florentine art, there is a mystical streak in Sienese art, characterized by a common focus on miraculous events, with less attention to proportions, distortions of time and place, and often dreamlike coloration. In the 16th century the Mannerists Beccafumi and Il Sodoma worked there. While Baldassare Peruzzi was born and trained in Siena, his major works and style reflect his long career in Rome. The economic and political decline of Siena by the 16th century, and its eventual subjugation by Florence, largely checked the development of Sienese painting, although it also meant that a good proportion of Sienese works in churches and public buildings were not discarded or destroyed by new paintings or rebuilding. Siena remains a remarkably well-preserved Italian late-Medieval town.
List of artists
1251–1300
1301–1350
- Duccio di Buoninsegna
- Segna di Buonaventura
- Niccolò di Segna
- Simone Martini
- Lippo Memmi
- Naddo Ceccarelli
- Ambrogio Lorenzetti
- Pietro Lorenzetti
- Bartolomeo Bulgarini
- Ugolino di Nerio
- Lippo Vanni
1351–1400
- Bartolo di Fredi
- Andrea Vanni
- Francesco di Vannuccio
- Jacopo di Mino del Pellicciaio
- Niccolò di Bonaccorso
- Niccolò di Ser Sozzo
- Luca di Tommè
- Taddeo di Bartolo
- Andrea di Bartolo
- Paolo di Giovanni Fei
- (Master of the Richardson Triptych)
1401–1450
- Benedetto di Bindo
- Domenico di Bartolo
- Giovanni di Paolo
- Gregorio di Cecco
- Martino di Bartolomeo
- Master of the Osservanza Triptych
- Pietro di Giovanni d'Ambrogio
- Priamo della Quercia
- Sano di Pietro
- Sassetta (Stefano di Giovanni)
- Lorenzo di Pietro (Vecchietta)
1451 - 1500
- Nicola di Ulisse
- Matteo di Giovanni[1]
- Benvenuto di Giovanni
- Carlo di Giovanni
- Francesco di Giorgio Martini
- Neroccio di Bartolomeo de' Landi
- Pietro di Francesco degli Orioli
- Guidoccio Cozzarelli
- Bernardino Fungai
- Pellegrino di Mariano
- Andrea di Niccolò
- Pietro di Domenico
1501–1550
- Girolamo di Benvenuto
- Giacomo Pacchiarotti
- Girolamo del Pacchia
- Domenico Beccafumi
- Il Sodoma (Giovanni Antonio Bazzi)
- Riccio Sanese (Bartolomeo Neroni)
1601–1650
See also
References
- Timothy Hyman; Sienese Painting, Thames & Hudson, 2003 ISBN 0-500-20372-5.
- ↑ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Matteo da Sienna". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Further reading
- Pope-Hennessy, John & Kanter, Laurence B. (1987). The Robert Lehman Collection I, Italian Paintings. New York, Princeton: The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press. ISBN 0870994794. (see index)
External links
- Italian paintings : a catalogue of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art : Sienese and Central Italian schools, a collection catalog containing information about the artists and their works (see index)
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