Giotto di Bondone(1267?-1337)
Italian painter and architect
Giotto [JAH toh] was born in a village
near Florence, Italy, the son of a poor shepherd. Little
is known about his early life or his beginnings as an
artist, but it is known that at some point he became a
student of famous Italian painter Giovanni Cimabue. It is
also known that he introduced an entirely new style of
painting to Italy. Prior to Giotto, Italian painters
portrayed subjects in a flat, unrealistic manner. Giotto,
on the other hand, painted solid, natural-looking forms.
For example, to show how light shines on an object in
nature, he illuminated one side of the object while
painting the other side of it in shadow.
Giotto produced a great number of works
during his lifetime, but very few survive. It is
believed, but not proven, that he first participated in
the decoration of the Upper Church at Assisi. Scenes from the Life of Christ, Legend
of St. Francis, and Isaac and Esau have all
been attributed to Giotto, but no conclusive evidence as
to the authenticity of the claims exists. [right: St.
Francis of Assisi Receiving the Stigmata is one of
the paintings from Assisi attributed to Giotto; it is now
on display at The Louvre in Paris] The earliest work
known to have been created by Giotto was the mosaic of
the Navicella, now in St. Peter's at Rome,
executed about 1300. He also worked on frescoes in the
Lateran Basilica, but those works have been lost.
Giotto's Madonna Enthroned with Saints
[left] shows some of the natural, lifelike qualities he
introduced into the art of his time. Giotto painted the
throne of the Madonna with open sides, and showed two
bearded men looking through the openings. In this way,
Giotto increased the feeling that the scene is not just a
flat panel but realistically recedes into space. The
painting was originally done for the Church of the
Ognissanti in Florence, Italy, but is now on display in
that city's Uffizi Gallery.
Giotto's greatest achievement was a series of 38
frescoes in the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua, begun about
1304. Among the greatest works of Italian art, the series
consists of scenes from the Life of the Virgin, Life
of Christ, the Last Judgement, and Virtues
and Vices. [right: Christ Disputing With the
Elders is one of the frescoes still on display in
the Scrovegni Chapel] The paintings show Giotto's genius
at painting natural and simple compositions that express
deep human emotions in a moving but restrained manner.
Giotto's last
great surviving paintings are frescoes in the Church of
Santa Croce in Florence. In these works, Giotto used more
complicated compositions than he did in the Scrovegni
frescoes. One of them, The Epiphany, is shown at
left; it is now on display at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art in New York City. Below is the Peruzzi Altarpiece,
created for the Peruzzi Family Chapel in the Church of
Santa Croce; it is now on display at the North Carolina
Museum of Art.

Giotto was also an architect. In 1334,
he became chief architect of the Cathedral of Florence.
He designed the campanile that still stands beside the
cathedral.
Some Other Works Attributed
to Giotto
 Last Supper, painting on wood, ca.
1306. On display at the Alte Pinakohek in Munich,
Germany.
Pentecost, ca. 1306-1312, was
originally part of a seven-section altarpiece created for
the Franciscan church at either Rimini or Sansepolcro.
This section is on display at the National Gallery of
London; all six of the other sections also survive, on
display in various museums.
Madonna and
Child, ca. 1320, was originally the central part of
a five-section altarpiece. It is notable for what was at
the time an unusual depiction of the Christ child --
notice how the child is shown holding on to his mother's
index finger while playfully reaching for the flower she
holds in her right hand. The vast majority of such
paintings done during Giotto's lifetime showed the Christ
child in a much more somber posture.
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