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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posthumous 19th century portrait statue of Nicola Pisano at the Uffizi in Florence

Nicola Pisano (also called Niccolò Pisano, Nicola de Apulia or Nicola Pisanus; c. 1220/1225 – c. 1284[1]) was an Italian sculptor whose work is noted for its classical Roman sculptural style. Pisano is sometimes considered to be the founder of modern sculpture.[2]

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  • Nicola and Giovanni Pisano, 1260-1301
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  • Defining Renaissance Art

Transcription

(music) Male: Here we're looking at the Baptistry in Pisa, a building that was begun in the mid 12th century. It's in a very famous location that perhaps people have seen. Female: It is where the Leaning Tower of Pisa is. Male: That's right. The Leaning Tower of Pisa, as it's known, is actually the bell tower of the Cathedral. This building, the Baptistry, is in front of the Cathedral. Usually this is how the buildings were arranged in these late Medieval Italian cities; the Cathedral with the Baptistry in front of it as a kind of religious and civic center of the city. Female: We see that in cities like Florence, too. Male: That's right. You see the same kind of arrangement there. Baptistries were especially important buildings. Of course, it was where baptisms would be performed. That had a great, great importance in these cities which were dominated by their Christian faith and practices because it was a place where essentially the individual, through baptism, was welcomed into the Christian community of that city. Female: So it makes sense that this is a place that the city government would want to decorate. Male: They were usually very richly decorated places, focus of a lot of patronage and attention because of their importance in cities of this type. Female: Cool, so let's go inside. We're in the Middle Ages when we're thinking about the architecture, right? When we go inside, we see something ... Male: Well, inside we're seeing something that's leading to a great transition; relatively revolutionary, in fact. That's when we look at this structure here, which is inside the Baptistry. This is the Pulpit by Nicola Pisano in the Pisa Baptistry, which was finished by about 1260. Female: A pulpit would be a place where the priest would stand to deliver sermons. Male: That's right. They would climb up and these reliefs here are essentially a low wall. Then this eagle supports a little stand where a book or other writings could be placed and the preacher would speak from it. Female: So everyone could see him and everyone could hear him. Male: We see these multicolored columns with capitals. Above the capitals are these figures of virtues. Then above are these reliefs that we see here, historiated reliefs, showing narratives from the life of Christ. Those reliefs are separated by small columnettes. What I'd like to draw our attention to is this very interesting figure of Fortitude. Female: This is one of the virtues. Male: One of the virtues on top of the capital, below the reliefs. Fortitude means strength. Here we see a figure, an allegorical figure, representing the virtue of strength, of fortitude. This figure is interesting and brings about a change, points in a new direction. Female: Really doesn't look like a Medieval sculpture anymore. Male: No. It's not very Romanesque looking. As we'll see, it's definitely not very Gothic looking. What it is, though, is extremely influenced by Classical antiquity, both in terms of how it looks, but also in terms of what it means. Of course a muscular athletic figure makes sense as a representation of fortitude. We can go even further in terms of who this figure is because as you can see, there's a lion's skin wrapped around his left arm and a lion cub that he holds on top of his right shoulder. That helps us identify this nude, athletic, muscular figure as, in fact, Hercules, or Heracles, the Greek and Roman mythological half diety who is famous for his strength. Female: He's both Classical looking and a Classical figure and a Christian virtue, all at the same time. Male: That's right. It's a Christian virtue of fortitude as personified by the Classical figure of Hercules, therefore it has this Classical meaning. As you said, it also looks very, very Classicizing. Female: Incredibly so. Male: Perhaps we can best see that by comparing it to an actual Classical sculpture. Here we're looking at the figure of Fortitude by Nicola Pisano, compared to Diadumenos, a Classical figure probably by Polyclitus, a marble version of it. What you can see are the ways that obviously Nicola Pisano was emulating, copying, influenced by, the Classical sculpture from centuries before. Female: It's remarkable. They both stand in contrapposto. Male: That's right. Female: So they both look very relaxed and very natural in their pose. There's a lot of attention to human anatomy, to the muscles of the body, to a kind of naturalism of the body. Male: That's right. The body kind of twists. It looks in different directions. The hips shift. The shoulders shift. It's relatively naturalistic in attention to the musculature and the way a body stands. Also, think about how Nicola Pisano's figure, even though it's attached to the pulpit, it exists really freely of it. Female: He looks like he could walk away from it. Male: Exactly. What we're seeing here is this very, very Classical looking figure and it's also a Classical figure in terms of its subject matter a little bit because it does represent Hercules. This is pretty important because throughout the Middle Ages up until this point, occasionally you would see figures that looked sometimes Classically influenced. But usually their meaning was very far removed from any kind of Classical meaning. Here, for one of the first times in this period, we're seeing a kind of reconnection of Classical form and Classical content, even though, as we said, ultimately its representing a Christian virtue on a very Christian structure inside an extremely Christian building. What we're seeing is an increasing interest in a kind of influence and a kind of rediscovery of Classical antiquity in various ways. Female: Yeah, that's so obvious. Let's compare it to a Medieval sculpture to make that point, some Gothic sculpture. Male: Here's some Gothic sculpture. This is from the west portal at Chartres Cathedral. which is begun in the mid 12th century, Around the same time that the Pisa Baptistry was being built, these figures were being carved; a little bit earlier than Nicola Pisano's Pulpit. Female: And far away, in Paris. Male: And far away, too. But what we're showing here is very different schools of sculpture around the same general time. You can see that the Gothic style, as you may know, is really characterized by very stiff, elongated, stylized figures, purposefully distant from any kind of naturalism, with the repeating folds of the drapery, the unindividualized faces, the repeating gestures. Here are figures that do not really exist autonomously from their background. Their proportions and their appearance are really dictated by the Gothic structure that they decorate. Female: Look at their feet. There's no way that they could stand. Male: They don't seem to really be standing. They don't seem to interact with any kind of psychological verity with the world around them. Female: No contrapposto. Male: No contrapposto. So again, compared to Nicola Pisano's figure, they're really a world away. You can see how he's moving very strongly away from that kind of Gothic tradition and other Medieval Romanesque traditions as well. Here's a view of the upper part of the Pulpit, the same one, so we can see our friend, Fortitude, down here. Then above, as we said, are these reliefs that represent stories or moments from the life and death of Christ. In this particular scene that we see above and to the right of Fortitude is the Adoration of the Magi, which shows the three kings coming to visit the newly born Christ and the Virgin Mary who sits here in a chair. What you can see is that this Classicizing aesthetic that's moving away from more Romanesque and Gothic styles is evident in these reliefs as well. Female: Absolutely. Male: Monumental, heavy figures with Female: Yeah, big folds of drapery. Male: Very heavy, somewhat naturalistic folds of drapery that give you Female: Very different than those lines of the drapery in the Gothic. Male: There's a little bit of repetition. There's some stylization, certainly, to be found. What we can see is that it's definitely moving away from that and heavily influenced by Classical antiquity. This is relevant to the Pisans, the people who would be using and seeing this object when it was originally built. Female: How so? Male: Because their city actually has a very strong Classical heritage. Pisa was founded by ancient Romans. The Medieval Pisans, they knew that. The heritage of that Classical antiquity surrounded them everywhere they looked. There were lots of remnants of Classical sculpture around them. One example is this sarcophagus, this carved tomb, which was, and still is, in Pisa. There were many, many fragments and pieces like this, some of which were actually incorporated into the Medieval walls and buildings of the city, so there really was this sense that Classical antiquity made up the fabric and the identity of Pisa itself. Female: Still it had been sort of neglected for a long time and is being, now, rediscovered. Male: But now they're feeling like they can reconnect with that Classical heritage and identity. This particular sarcophagus is important because it shows, especially related to the reliefs that we just looked at, how the figures are quite large. They fill up the height of the relief completely, just like in Nicola Pisano's reliefs later on. This standing male nude figure looks very, very much like the figure of Fortitude so might have been the influence for that figure. Here we see a seated female figure who, although she's seated, takes up the whole height of the relief in exactly the same way that the Virgin Mary does in the Adoration of the Magi we looked at a second ago. This might be the very example that Nicola Pisano might have looked at and it is very nearby, in a cemetery called the Camposanto, which is just a few yards away from the Baptistry. Here we can really see that Classical influence in action. Nicola Pisano, his last name means the Pisan, but he's not actually from Pisa. He's probably from Southern Italy, maybe connected to the court of the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II, who in his patronage and interests was revitalizing a Classical revival. Perhaps the artist influenced by that in his origins comes to Pisa, finds a city that's rich in Classical heritage, a people that are open to these new kinds of connections, and from there these changes start blossoming. Female: Makes sense. Male: Now, Nicola has a son named Giovanni. They worked together on several projects. Then around 1300, Giovanni Pisano starts his own workshop and his own independent projects. This is one of them. This is the Pulpit from the Church of Sant'Andrea in Pistoia, which is dated to 1301. This is by Giovanni Pisano. You can see the structure is essentially the same. There's colored marble columns with capitals, allegorical figures on top of the capitals below reliefs that make up the low walls of the pulpit itself. One difference you can see right away is that the corners that separate the reliefs are no longer small columns, but rather figures. What this does is give a greater sense of continuity and connection between the individual reliefs as opposed to them being very distinctly separated by the frames that we saw in his father's example from 40 years before. Female: Where they were attached columns there. Male: I want to look at one specific thing in this Pulpit, which is the relief that we see here on top of the Massacre of the Innocents. This tells a story from the New Testament where Herod orders that all the newly born male children in Bethlehem be executed because he's heard that Christ has been born and this new leader that's going to bring great changes that he doesn't want, according to the text, so he orders this execution. What we are looking at here is this really emotional, disturbing scene of Roman soldiers slaughtering children. Female: And mothers. Male: Their mothers trying to, as we see here, protect them or mourning over their dead bodies. Female: Or averting their glances. Male: Averting their eyes, running away. Soldiers with knives in their hands actually executing infants. Women covering their faces. Here's Herod giving the order. Now, in some ways Giovanni Pisano's sculpture is connected to that of his father. There's this naturalism that we saw developing earlier on. There's Classicism, especially in some of the other areas of the Pulpit. But what makes Giovanni Pisano's sculpture of the early 1300s more distinct is obviously his great interest in communicating emotions; a kind of vibrant expressionistic representation of the feelings that communicates the horrifying scene that we're looking at. It really connects with the viewer. Female: Through their gestures, their facial expressions. Male: Exactly. Those are the keys for him and other artists throughout this period, using gestures and facial expressions to tell a story as powerfully as possible. Female: Of course this is another sign of moving away from the Middle Ages, from those Gothic, expressionless faces. Male: Especially in terms of marrying those kinds of expressions, that kind of emotion, with naturalism, because sometimes in Gothic art you do see things that are very graphic or violent looking, but also very stylized. Here we have a kind of naturalistic representation that's naturalistic in terms of the physical appearance, and also naturalistic in terms of the psychological expressiveness. What's interesting is to think that this is happening in the first years of the 1300s, exactly at the same time that Giatto is doing the very same thing in painting. (music)

Early life

His birth date or origins are uncertain. He was born in Apulia, as the son of "Petrus de Apulia", as stated in the archives of the Cathedral of Siena.[citation needed] Nicola Pisano was probably trained in the local workshops of the emperor Frederick II, and he attended his coronation.[3] Here he was trained to give to the traditional representations more movement and emotions, intertwining Classical and Christian traditions. His only remaining works from this period are two griffon heads with a soft chiaroscuro effect.

Around 1245 he moved to Tuscany to work at the Prato Castle. The lions on the portal of this castle are probably by his hand. "The head of a young girl" (now displayed in the Museo del Palazzo Venezia in Rome), cut in the hardstone of Elba, is also ascribed to Nicola Pisano in the same period.

He moved to Lucca, working at façade of the Cathedral of Saint Martin, resulting in the relief Deposition from the Cross (on the north tympanum) and the lintel reliefs Nativity and Adoration of the Magi.

Pulpit (detail): the "Nativity" and Annunciation to the Shepherds

Pulpit of the Pisa baptistery

He moved to Pisa between 1245 and 1250, where his son Giovanni Pisano was born. Around 1255 he received a commission for the pulpit in the Pisa Baptistry. He finished this work in 1260 and signed it with "Nicola Pisanus". He was aided by several assistants, among which were Arnolfo di Cambio and Lapo di Ricevuto.

In this pulpit, considered one of his masterworks, he succeeded in making a synthesis of the French Gothic style with the Classical style of ancient Rome, as he had probably learned in South Italy and must have seen on the sarcophagi of the Camposanto in Pisa, such as the Phaedra sarcophagus[4] or Meleager hunting the Calydonian Boar on a sarcophagus brought as booty to Pisa by its navy. Vasari[5] relates that Nicola Pisano constantly studied these Roman remains and the Roman sculptures from Augustan times seem to have marked a deep impression on him.

Phaedra and Hippolytus Sarcophagus, 1-2 ct. C.E., Camposanto, Pisa
Nicola Pisano's Pisa pulpit with the first two reliefs and the Hercules beneath

The pulpit rests on seven columns. A raised central column is supported by sculptures of animals and telamons. It is surrounded by six external columns of different heights, three of which rest on realistically carved lions, while the other three rest on octagonal bases. The columns came from remains at Ostia. The Corinthian capitals support trefoil Gothic arches, decorated in the spandrels with paired Prophets and, under the reliefs of the Crucifixion and the Last Judgement, with Evangelists. The arches are separated by sculptures of St. John the Baptist, St. Michael and four Virtues, Charity, Fortitude, Temperance and Prudence. The nude sculpture of Fortitude obviously derives from a Roman Hercules.[6]

The hexagonal pulpit itself consists of five reliefs in white Carrara marble from the Life of Christ: the first relief combines three scenes, the Annunciation, the Nativity and the Annunciation to the Shepherds, while the following show single scenes: the Adoration of the Magi, the Presentation in the Temple, the Crucifixion and the Last Judgment. The backgrounds of these scenes were originally painted and enamelled, while the eyes of the figures were coloured.[7] This contributed further to a realistic impression of these religious topics. All these reliefs, except the last two, reflect Pisano's knowledge of the style on Roman sarcophagi. The figures wear tunics in a Roman fashion. The reclining Virgin of the Nativity derives from Etruscan tomb sculpture.[8] She also wears a pallium over her head in the same manner as a Roman matron. In the Presentation panel the Madonna reminds us of the regal bearing of goddesses in late Roman sculpture, while the expressive face of St. Anne shows the ravages of age.

The scene The Last Judgement was probably based on a Byzantine ivory and The Crucifixion was sculpted with the same elegance as contemporary French Gothic art.

Another inspiration for this pulpit he may have found also in the triumphal arches he could have seen in Rome when travelling to Ostia. The form of this pulpit diverges completely from contemporary art. The sculptures are represented in the same manner as those of the Arch of Constantine in Rome, with the figures standing atop columns. Furthermore, the same arch has an attic storey with sculpted scenes, as does the pulpit.Ref?

East side of the baptistery above main portal with the Gothic arcade by Nicola (and Giovanni) Pisano

Between 1260 and 1264 he finished the work of the architect Diotisalvi on the dome of the baptistery.Ref? He increased its height with a system of two domes: a small truncated cone on top of the hemispherical dome. The two rows of traceried gables were later decorated by his son Giovanni Pisano between 1277 and 1284.

Shrine of Saint Dominic (Bologna)

During 1264 he was asked to work on the Shrine of Saint Dominic in the Basilica of San Domenico in Bologna. He was certainly responsible for the design, but his input was probably minimal. In 1265 he was already at work on the pulpit for the Siena Cathedral. The front side was done in his workshop, partially by Nicola Pisano himself but mostly by his assistant Lapo di Ricevuto. It would almost take 500 years to finish this shrine through the work of famous sculptors: Arnolfo di Cambio, fra Guglielmo Agnelli, Niccolò dell'Arca, the young Michelangelo, Girolamo Coltellini and Giovanni Batista Boudard. The expressive face of saint Dominic, so different from the blander faces in the front panel "Saint Dominic resurrects Napoleone Orsini", is attributed to Arnolfo di Cambio.

Siena Cathedral Pulpit

In September 1265 he was given his next major assignment: a marble pulpit for Siena Cathedral. This pulpit, made of Carrara marble, was sculpted between the end of 1265 and November 1268 with the extensive participation of his son Giovanni Pisano and his assistants Arnolfo di Cambio, Lapo di Ricevuto and several other artists.

This is the earliest remaining work in the cathedral. Nicola Pisano was given this commission due to his fame by the Pisa pulpit. This pulpit, resembling the Pisa pulpit but larger, is even more ambitious and is considered his masterpiece. The whole message of the pulpit is concerned with the doctrine of Salvation and the Last Judgment.

Pistoia and Perugia

In July 1273 Nicola Pisano was commissioned by the Operai di San Jacopo of Pistoia to make the altar of San Jacopo in the Pistoia Cathedral. He worked on it together with his son Giovanni. The chapel of San Jacopo was demolished in 1786. The Holy Water stoup with its three female figures was probably sculpted at the same time. Giovanni Pisano would later make his first pulpit in the same cathedral.

Fontana Maggiore, Perugia

His last major commission was the relief panels on the Fontana Maggiore ("Great Fountain") at Perugia (1277–1278). Fra Bevignate and Boninsegna designed the fountain with three superposed basins. The fountain certainly shows the delicate hand of Nicolò Pisano, but most sculpting was executed by his son Giovanni Pisano and his assistants. By its richness in details and by its iconography, this last work shows a rapprochement to French Gothic art.

Conclusion

Although influenced by the works of Classical Antiquity, Nicola was not simply an imitator. His figures are original creations that came into being through a thorough study and understanding of the antique prototypes and the reinstating of antique representations. His works are the most important precursors of Italian Renaissance sculpture. Surveys of Italian Renaissance art often begin with the year 1260, the year that Nicola Pisano dated his pulpit in the Pisa baptistery.

On the other hand, as the pulpit of the Siena Cathedral shows, Nicola Pisano was still attached to contemporary Gothic art. This characteristic may arise because this pulpit was finished by his son Giovanni Pisano who did not appreciate Antiquity in the same manner. Both styles coexisted for several generations. International Gothic and its variations became briefly more popular in the Early 15th century than the Classicism of the High Renaissance.

Nicola Pisano has pushed 13th-century Tuscan sculpture in the direction of art that integrated the features of Roman art, while simultaneously staying attached to the Gothic art from Northern Europe. The true inheritor of Nicola's classical style was Arnolfo di Cambio (c. 1250–1302), whose early death left the field clear for Giovanni Pisano, who, by then, was already pursuing his own mixture of French Gothic and the classical style.

Giorgio Vasari included a biography of Nicola Pisano in his Lives.

Notes

  1. ^ "Pisano, Nicola and Giovanni". Grolier Encyclopedia of Knowledge. Grolier. 1991. ISBN 0-7172-5300-7..
  2. ^ Michael Greenhalgh (1978). "Nicola Pisano and Giotto: Founders of Renaissance Classicism". Retrieved 2007-09-18.
  3. ^ "Niccola Pisano". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  4. ^ Pope-Hennessy, John (1996) [1955]. Italian Gothic Sculpture. An Introduction to Italian Sculpture. Vol. 1 (4th ed.). London: Phaidon. pp. 16, 229.
  5. ^ Giorgio Vasari - The Lives of the Painters, Sculptors & Architects, Volume 1 online
  6. ^ Pope-Hennessy 1996, p. 230.
  7. ^ Pope-Hennessy 1996, p. 230.
  8. ^ Pope-Hennessy 1996, p. 16.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 10 February 2024, at 21:21
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