<h2><br/><br/><SPAN name="GIOVANNI_CIMABUE" id="GIOVANNI_CIMABUE"></SPAN>GIOVANNI CIMABUE<br/><br/></h2>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img065" id="img065"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-065tb.jpg" width-obs="420" height-obs="650" alt="MADONNA, CHILD AND ANGELS" title="" /> <p class="author"><i>Alinari</i></p> <span class="caption">MADONNA, CHILD AND ANGELS<br/>(<i>After the painting by</i> Cimabue. <i>Paris: Louvre, 1260</i>)</span>
<br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-065.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2"></SPAN></span><br/><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LIFE_OF_GIOVANNI_CIMABUE" id="LIFE_OF_GIOVANNI_CIMABUE"></SPAN>LIFE OF GIOVANNI CIMABUE,</h2>
<h3>PAINTER OF FLORENCE</h3>
<p>By the infinite flood of evils which had laid prostrate and submerged
poor Italy there had not only been ruined everything that could truly
claim the name of building, but there had been blotted out (and this was
of graver import) the whole body of the craftsmen, when, by the will of
God, in the city of Florence, in the year 1240, there was born, to give
the first light to the art of painting, Giovanni, surnamed Cimabue, of
the family, noble in those times, of Cimabue. He, while growing up,
being judged by his father and by others to have a beautiful and acute
intelligence, was sent, to the end that he might exercise himself in
letters, to a master in S. Maria Novella, his relative, who was then
teaching grammar to the novices of that convent; but Cimabue, in place
of attending to his letters, would spend the whole day, as one who felt
himself led thereto by nature, in drawing, on books and other papers,
men, horses, houses, and diverse other things of fancy; to which natural
inclination fortune was favourable, for certain Greek painters had been
summoned to Florence by those who then governed the city, for nothing
else but to restore to Florence the art of painting, which was rather
out of mind than out of fashion, and they began, among the other works
undertaken in the city, the Chapel of the Gondi, whereof to-day the
vaulting and the walls are little less than eaten away by time, as may
be seen in S. Maria Novella beside the principal chapel, where it
stands. Wherefore Cimabue, having begun to take his first steps in this
art which pleased him, playing truant often from school, would stand the
livelong day watching these masters at work, in a manner that, being
judged by his father and by these painters to be in such<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4"></SPAN></span> wise fitted
for painting that there could be hoped for him, applying himself to this
profession, an honourable success, to his own no small satisfaction he
was apprenticed by the said father to these men; whereupon, exercising
himself without ceasing, in a short time nature assisted him so greatly
that he surpassed by a long way, both in drawing and in colouring, the
manner of the masters who were teaching him. For they, giving no thought
to making any advance, had made those works in that fashion wherein they
are seen to-day—that is, not in the good ancient manner of the Greeks
but in that rude modern manner of those times; and because, although he
imitated these Greeks, he added much perfection to the art, relieving it
of a great part of their rude manner, he gave honour to his country with
his name and with the works that he made, to which witness is borne in
Florence by the pictures that he wrought, such as the front of the altar
in S. Cecilia, and in S. Croce a panel with a Madonna, which was and
still is placed against a pilaster on the right within the choir. After
this, he made a S. Francis on a small panel on a gold ground, and
portrayed him from nature (which was something new in those times) as
best he knew, and round him all the stories of his life, in twenty small
pictures full of little figures on a gold ground.</p>
<p>Having next undertaken to make a large panel for the monks of
Vallombrosa, in the Abbey of S. Trinita in Florence, he showed in that
work (using therein great diligence, so as to rise equal to the esteem
which had already been conceived of him) better inventions and a
beautiful method in the attitude of a Madonna, whom he made with the
Child in her arms and with many angels round her in adoration, on a gold
ground; which panel, being finished, was placed by these monks over the
high-altar of the said church, and being afterwards removed, in order to
give that place to the panel by Alesso Baldovinetti which is there
to-day, it was placed in a smaller chapel in the left-hand aisle of the
said church.</p>
<p>Working next in fresco on the Hospital of the Porcellana, at the corner
of the Via Nuova which goes into the Borg' Ognissanti, on the façade
which has in the middle the principal door, and making on one<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5"></SPAN></span> side the
Annunciation of the Virgin by the Angel, and on the other Jesus Christ
with Cleophas and Luke, figures as large as life, he swept away that
ancient manner, making the draperies, the vestments, and everything else
in this work, a little more lively and more natural and softer than the
manner of these Greeks, all full of lines and profiles both in mosaic
and in painting; which manner, rough, rude, and vulgar, the painters of
those times, not by means of study, but by a certain convention, had
taught one to the other for many and many a year, without ever thinking
of bettering their draughtsmanship, of beauty of colouring, or of any
invention that might be good.</p>
<p>Cimabue, being summoned again after this work by the same Prior who had
caused him to make the works in S. Croce, made him a large Crucifix on
wood, which is still seen to-day in the church; which work was the
reason, it appearing to the Prior that he had been well served, that he
took him to S. Francesco in Pisa, their convent, in order to make a S.
Francis on a panel, which was held by these people to be a most rare
work, there being seen therein a certain greater quality of excellence,
both in the air of the heads and in the folds of the draperies, than had
been shown in the Greek manner up to that time by anyone who had wrought
anything, not only in Pisa, but in all Italy. Cimabue having next made
for the same church on a large panel the image of Our Lady, with the
Child in her arms and with many angels round her, also on a ground of
gold, it was after no long time removed from where it had been set up
the first time, in order to make there the marble altar that is there at
present, and was placed within the church beside the door on the left
hand; and for this work he was much praised and rewarded by the people
of Pisa. In the same city of Pisa, at the request of the then Abbot of
S. Paolo in Ripa d'Arno, he made a S. Agnes on a little panel, and round
her, with little figures, all the stories of her life; which little
panel is to-day over the altar of the Virgins in the said church.</p>
<p>By reason of these works, then, the name of Cimabue being very famous
everywhere, he was brought to Assisi, a city of Umbria, where, in
company with certain Greek masters, in the lower Church of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN></span> S.
Francesco, he painted part of the vaulting, and on the walls the life of
Jesus Christ and that of S. Francis. In these pictures he surpassed by a
long way those Greek painters; wherefore, growing in courage, he began
by his own self to paint the upper church in fresco, and in the chief
apse, over the choir, on four sides, he made certain stories of Our
Lady—namely, her death; when her soul is borne by Christ to Heaven upon
a throne of clouds; and when, in the midst of a choir of angels, He
crowns her, with a great number of saints below, both male and female,
now eaten away by time and by dust. Next, in the sections of the
vaulting of the said church, which are five, he painted in like manner
many scenes. In the first, over the choir, he made the four Evangelists,
larger than life, and so well that to-day there is still recognized in
them much that is good, and the freshness of the colours in the flesh
shows that painting began to make great progress in fresco work through
the labours of Cimabue. The second section he made full of golden stars
on a ground of ultramarine. In the third he made in certain medallions
Jesus Christ, the Virgin His mother, S. John the Baptist, and S.
Francis—namely, in every medallion one of these figures, and in every
quarter segment of the vaulting a medallion. And between this and the
fifth section he painted the fourth with golden stars, as above, on a
ground of ultramarine. In the fifth he painted the four Doctors of the
Church, and beside each one of these one of the four chief Religious
Orders—a work truly laborious and executed with infinite diligence. The
vaulting finished, he wrought, also in fresco, the upper walls of the
whole left-hand side of the church, making towards the high-altar,
between the windows and right up to the vaulting, eight scenes from the
Old Testament, commencing from the beginning of Genesis and following
the most notable events. And in the space that is round the windows, up
to the point where they end in the gallery that encircles the interior
of the wall of the church, he painted the remainder of the Old Testament
in eight other scenes. And opposite this work, in sixteen other scenes
corresponding to these, he painted the acts of Our Lady and of Jesus
Christ. And on the end wall over the principal door, and round the rose
window of the church, he made her Ascension into Heaven and the Holy
Spirit descending on<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN></span> the Apostles. This work, truly very great and
rich and most excellently executed, must have, in my judgment, amazed
the world in those times, seeing, above all, that painting had lain so
long in such great darkness; and to me, who saw it again in the year
1563, it appeared very beautiful, thinking how in so great darkness
Cimabue could see so great light. But of all these pictures (and to this
we should give consideration), those on the roof, as being less injured
by dust and by other accidents, have been preserved much better than the
others. These works finished, Giovanni put his hand to painting the
lower walls—namely, those that are from the windows downwards—and made
certain works upon them, but being called to Florence on some business
of his own, he did not carry this work further; but it was finished, as
will be told in the proper place, by Giotto, many years afterwards.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img071" id="img071"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-071tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="565" alt=""ISAAC'S BLESSING"" title="" /> <p class="author"><i>Anderson</i></p>
<span class="caption">
"ISAAC'S BLESSING"<br/>
(<i>After the fresco of the</i> Roman School.<br/> <i>Assisi: Upper Church of S.
Francesco</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-071.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img073" id="img073"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-073tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="441" alt="THE DEPOSITION FROM THE CROSS" title="" /> <p class="author"><i>Anderson</i></p> <span class="caption">
THE DEPOSITION FROM THE CROSS<br/>
(<i>After the fresco by</i> Pietro Laurati [Lorenzetti].<br/> <i>Assisi: Lower
Church of S. Francesco</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-073.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p>Having returned, then, to Florence, Cimabue painted in the cloister of
S. Spirito (wherein there is painted in the Greek manner, by other
masters, the whole side facing the church) three small arches by his own
hand, from the life of Christ, and truly with much design. And at the
same time he sent certain works wrought by himself in Florence to
Empoli, which works are still held to-day in great veneration in the
Pieve of that township. Next, he made for the Church of S. Maria Novella
the panel of Our Lady that is set on high between the Chapel of the
Rucellai and that of the Bardi da Vernia; which work was of greater size
than any figure that had been made up to that time. And certain angels
that are round it show that, although he still had the Greek manner, he
was going on approaching in part to the line and method of the modern.
Wherefore this work caused so great marvel to the people of that age, by
reason of there not having been seen up to then anything better, that it
was borne in most solemn procession from the house of Cimabue to the
church, with much rejoicing and with trumpets, and he was thereby much
rewarded and honoured. It is said, and it may be read in certain records
of old painters, that while Cimabue was painting the said panel in
certain gardens close to the Porta S. Pietro, there passed through
Florence King Charles the Elder of Anjou, and that, among the many signs
of welcome made to him by the men of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span> this city, they brought him to see
Cimabue's panel; whereupon, for the reason that it had not yet been seen
by anyone, in the showing it to the King there flocked together to it
all the men and all the women of Florence, with the utmost rejoicing and
in the greatest crowd in the world. Wherefore, by reason of the joy that
the neighbours had thereby, they called that place the Borgo Allegri;
which place, although enclosed in time within the walls, has ever after
retained the same name.</p>
<p>In S. Francesco in Pisa, where he wrought, as has been said above,
certain other works, there is in the cloister, beside the door that
leads into the church, in a corner, a small panel in distemper by the
hand of Cimabue, wherein is a Christ on the Cross, with certain angels
round Him, who, weeping, are taking with their hands certain words that
are written round the head of Christ and are presenting them to the ears
of a Madonna who stands weeping on the right, and on the other side to
S. John the Evangelist, who is on the left, all grieving. And the words
to the Virgin are: <span class="smcap">MULIER, ECCE FILIUS TUUS</span>; and those to S. John: <span class="smcap">ECCE
MATER TUA</span>; and those that an angel standing apart holds in his hand,
say: <span class="smcap">EX ILLA HORA ACCEPIT EAM DISCIPULUS IN SUAM</span>. Wherein it is to be
observed that Cimabue began to give light and to open the way to
invention, assisting art with words in order to express his conception;
which was certainly something whimsical and new.</p>
<p>Now because, by means of these works, Cimabue had acquired a very great
name, together with much profit, he was appointed as architect, in
company with Arnolfo Lapi, a man then excellent in architecture, for the
building of S. Maria del Fiore in Florence. But at length, having lived
sixty years, he passed to the other life in the year 1300, having little
less than resurrected painting. He left many disciples, and among others
Giotto, who was afterwards an excellent painter; which Giotto dwelt,
after Cimabue, in his master's own house in the Via del Cocomero.
Cimabue was buried in S. Maria del Fiore, with that epitaph made for him
by one of the Nini:</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">CREDIDIT UT CIMABOS PICTURÆ CASTRA TENERE,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 3em;">SIC TENUIT, VIVENS: NUNC TENET ASTRA POLI.</span><br/></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img077" id="img077"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-077tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="430" alt="" title="" /> <p class="author"><i>Anderson</i></p>
<span class="caption">
THE CRUCIFIXION<br/>
(<i>After the fresco by</i> Cimabue. <i>Assisi: Upper Church of S.
Francesco</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-077.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p>I will not refrain from saying that if to the glory of Cimabue there had
not been contrasted the greatness of Giotto, his disciple, his fame
would have been greater, as Dante demonstrates in his <i>Commedia</i>,
wherein, alluding in the eleventh canto of the <i>Purgatorio</i> to this very
inscription on the tomb, he said:</p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">Credette Cimabue nella pittura</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Tener lo campo, ed hora ha Giotto il grido,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Si che la fama di colui s' oscura.</span><br/></p>
<p>In explanation of these verses, a commentator of Dante, who wrote at the
time when Giotto was alive and ten or twelve years after the death of
Dante himself—that is, about the year of Christ 1334—says, speaking of
Cimabue, precisely these words: "Cimabue was a painter of Florence in
the time of the author, very noble beyond the knowledge of man, and
withal so arrogant and so disdainful that if there were found by anyone
any failing or defect in his work, or if he himself had seen one (even
as it comes to pass many times that the craftsman errs, through a defect
in the material whereon he works, or through some lack in the instrument
wherewith he labours), incontinently he would destroy that work, however
costly it might be. Giotto was and is the most exalted among the
painters of the same city of Florence, and his works bear testimony for
him in Rome, in Naples, in Avignon, in Florence, in Padua, and in many
parts of the world." This commentary is now in the hands of the Very
Reverend Don Vincenzio Borghini, Prior of the Innocenti, a man not only
most famous for his nobility, goodness, and learning, but also endowed
with such love and understanding for all the finer arts that he has
deserved to be elected by the Lord Duke Cosimo, most properly, as his
Lieutenant in our Academy of Design.</p>
<p>But to return to Cimabue: Giotto, truly, obscured his fame not otherwise
than as a great light does the splendour of one much less, for the
reason that although Cimabue was, as it were, the first cause of the
renovation of the art of painting, yet Giotto, his pupil, moved by
laudable ambition and assisted by Heaven and by nature, was he who,
rising higher with his thought, opened the gate of truth to those who
have brought her to that perfection and majesty wherein we see<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span> her in
her own century, which, being used to see every day the marvels, the
miracles, nay, the impossibilities wrought by the craftsmen in that art,
is now brought to such a pitch that nothing that men do, be it even more
Divine than human, causes it in any way to marvel. Well is it with those
whose labours deserve all praise, if, in place of being praised and
admired, they do not thereby incur blame and many times even disgrace.</p>
<p>The portrait of Cimabue, by the hand of Simone Sanese, is to be seen in
the Chapter-house of S. Maria Novella, made in profile in the story of
the Faith, in a figure that has the face thin, the beard small, reddish,
and pointed, with a cap according to the use of those times—that is,
wound round and round and under the throat in lovely fashion. He who is
beside him is Simone himself, the author of that work, who portrayed
himself with two mirrors in order to make his head in profile, placing
the one opposite to the other. And that soldier clad in armour who is
between them is said to be Count Guido Novello, then Lord of Poppi.
There remains for me to say of Cimabue that in the beginning of our
book, where I have put together drawings from the own hand of all those
who have made drawings from his time to ours, there are to be seen
certain small things made by his hand in the way of miniature, wherein,
although to-day perchance they appear rather rude than otherwise, it is
seen how much excellence was given by his work to draughtsmanship.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img081" id="img081"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-081tb.jpg" width-obs="367" height-obs="600" alt="" title="" /> <span class="caption">CIMABUE: MADONNA AND CHILD<br/>
(<i>Florence: Accademia</i> 102 <i>Panel</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-081.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span><br/></p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span></p>
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