قراءة كتاب Filippo Lippi
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NEW YORK: FREDERICK A. STOKES CO.
CONTENTS
Page | |
I. | 9 |
II. | 19 |
III. | 41 |
III. | 66 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Plate | ||
I. | The Virgin Adoring the Infant Saviour | Frontispiece |
In the Accademia, Florence | ||
Page | ||
II. | St. John the Baptist with six other Saints | 14 |
In the National Gallery, London | ||
III. | The Vision of St. Bernard | 24 |
In the National Gallery, London | ||
IV. | The Annunciation | 34 |
In the National Gallery, London | ||
V. | The Coronation of the Virgin | 40 |
In the Collection of Prince Liechtenstein in Vienna | ||
VI. | La Mère Laborieuse | 50 |
In the Accademia, Florence | ||
VII. | The Virgin and Child with two Angels | 60 |
In the Uffizi Gallery, Florence | ||
VIII. | The Virgin and Child with Angels and two Abbots | 70 |
In the Louvre, Paris |
I
IN Vasari's gossipy Lives of the Painters, and indeed in most art histories written before the era of scientific critical research, there is an inclination, in the absence of documentary material, to reconstruct the old masters' characters and lives from the evidence of their extant works. Many a charming legend, that was originally suggested by the expression of the painter's personality in his art, and has been handed down from generation to generation, had to be shelved as dusty archives yielded new knowledge of indisputable prosaic facts to the diligent searcher. Whilst the serious student owes a debt of deep gratitude to those who devote their time and labour to the investigation of documentary evidence, and to establishing critical standards for the sifting of the great masters' works from those of their followers and imitators, the elimination of romance from the history of art is a hindrance rather than a help to the ordinary person who cares not a jot about morphological characteristics, but loves nevertheless to spend an hour now and then in communion with the old masters. For him, paradoxical though it may seem, there is more significant truth in many an entirely fictitious anecdote, than in the dry facts recorded by the conscientious historian.
Thus we know now that Domenico Veneziano outlived Andrea dal Castagno by several years, and could therefore not have been foully murdered by his jealous rival. But does not the fable of this act of violence, suggested no doubt by the fierceness and rugged strength of Andrea's art, help the layman to understand and appreciate the qualities which constitute the greatness of that art? We know now that Fra Angelico, far from accounting it a sin to paint from the nude, was an eager student of human anatomy; but the stories told of his piety and angelic sweetness have become so fused with everybody's conception of the Dominican friar's art, that even those to whom the spiritual significance of art is a sealed book, search almost instinctively for signs of religious fervour and exaltation in Fra Angelico's paintings. The stories of Sodoma's habits of life and of his strange doings at Mont' Oliveto belong probably to the realm of fiction, but they serve to explain and accentuate the worldly tendencies of his artistic achievement.
In these instances, to which many others might easily be added, the artists' personality and manner of life have been fancifully reconstructed from the character of their work. Very different is the case of Fra Filippo Lippi. Here criticism has seized upon certain authentic facts of the Carmelite friar's life and amorous adventures—facts that in their main current have been established beyond