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Giottino
Giottino (1324 - 1357) was an early Florentine
painter.
Giorgio Vasari is the principal authority in regard
to this artist; but it is not by any means easy to bring the details
of his narrative into harmony with such facts as can now be verified.
It would appear that there was a painter of the name of Tommaso
(or Maso) di Stefano termed Giottino; and the Giottino of Vasari
is said to have been born in 1324, and to have died early, of consumption,
in 1357, dates which must be regarded as open to considerable doubt.
Stefano, the father of Tommaso, was himself a celebrated
painter in the early revival of art; his naturalism was indeed so
highly appreciated by contemporaries as to earn him the appellation
of "Scimia della Natura" (ape of nature). He, it seems,
instructed his son, who, however, applied himself with greater predilection
to studying the works of the great Giotto, formed his style on these,
and hence was called Giottino. It is even said that Giottino was
really the son (others say the great-grandson) of Giotto. To this
statement little or no importance can be attached.
To Maso di Stefano, or Giottino, Vasari and Ghiberti
attribute the frescoes in the chapel of S. Silvestro (or of the
Bardi family) in the Florentine church of Santa Croce; these represent
the miracles of Pope San Silvestro as narrated in the "Golden
Legend," one conspicuous subject being the sealing of the lips
of a malignant dragon. These works are animated and firm in drawing,
with naturalism carried further than by Giotto. From the evidence
of style, some modern connoisseurs assign to the same hand the paintings
in the funeral vault of the Strozzi family, below the Cappella degli
Spagnuoli in the church of Santa Maria Novella, representing the
crucifixion and other subjects.
Vasari ascribes also to his Giottino the frescoes
of the life of St Nicholas in the lower church of Assisi. This series,
however, is not really in that part of the church which Vasari designates,
but is in the chapel of the Sacrament; and the works in that chapel
are understood to be by Giotto di Stefano, who worked in the second
half of the 14th century--very excellent productions of their period.
They are much damaged, and the style is hardly similar to that of
the Sylvester frescoes. It might hence be inferred that two different
men produced the works which are unitedly fathered upon the half-legendary
"Giottino," the consumptive youth, solitary and melancholic,
but passionately devoted to his art.
A large number of other works have been attributed
to the same hand; we need only mention an "Apparition of the
Virgin to St Bernard," in the Florentine Academy; a lost painting,
very popular in its day, commemorating the expulsion, which took
place in 1343, of the duke of Athens from Florence; and a marble
statue erected on the Florentine campanile. Vasari particularly
praises Giottino for well-blended chiaroscuro.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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