<h2><br/><br/><SPAN name="PIETRO_LAURATI" id="PIETRO_LAURATI"></SPAN>PIETRO LAURATI</h2>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img221" id="img221"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-221tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="454" alt="THE MADONNA ENTHRONED" title="" /> <p class="author"><i>Alinari</i></p>
<span class="caption">THE MADONNA ENTHRONED<br/>(<i>After the polyptych</i> by Pietro Laurati [Lorenzetti]. <i>Arezzo: S. Maria
della Pieve</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-221.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p><br/><br/><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span></p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="LIFE_OF_PIETRO_LAURATI" id="LIFE_OF_PIETRO_LAURATI"></SPAN>LIFE OF PIETRO LAURATI</h2>
<h2>[<i>PIETRO LORENZETTI</i>],</h2>
<h3>PAINTER OF SIENA</h3>
<p>Pietro Laurati, an excellent painter of Siena, proved in his life how
great is the contentment of the truly able, who feel that their works
are prized both at home and abroad, and who see themselves sought after
by all men, for the reason that in the course of his life he was sent
for and held dear throughout all Tuscany, having first become known
through the scenes that he painted in fresco for the Scala, a hospital
in Siena, wherein he imitated in such wise the manner of Giotto, then
spread throughout all Tuscany, that it was believed with great reason
that he was destined, as afterwards came to pass, to become a better
master than Cimabue and Giotto and the others had been; for the figures
that represent the Virgin ascending the steps of the Temple, accompanied
by Joachim and Anna, and received by the priest, and then in the
Marriage, are so beautifully adorned, so well draped, and so simply
wrapped in their garments, that they show majesty in the air of the
heads, and a most beautiful manner in their bearing. By reason of this
work, which was the first introduction into Siena of the good method of
painting, giving light to the many beautiful intellects which have
flourished in that city in every age, Pietro was invited to Monte
Oliveto di Chiusuri, where he painted a panel in distemper that is
placed to-day in the portico below the church. In Florence, next,
opposite to the left-hand door of the Church of S. Spirito, on the
corner where to-day there is a butcher, he painted a shrine which, by
reason of the softness of the heads and of the sweetness that is seen in
it, deserves the highest praise from every discerning craftsman.</p>
<p>Going from Florence to Pisa, he wrought in the Campo Santo, on the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span> wall
that is beside the principal door, all the lives of the Holy Fathers,
with expressions so lively and attitudes so beautiful that he equalled
Giotto and gained thereby very great praise, having expressed in certain
heads, both with drawing and with colour, all that vivacity that the
manner of those times was able to show. From Pisa he went to Pistoia,
where he made a Madonna with some angels round her, very well grouped,
on a panel in distemper, for the Church of S. Francesco; and in the
predella that ran below this panel, in certain scenes, he made certain
little figures so lively and so vivid that in those times it was
something marvellous; wherefore, since they satisfied himself no less
than others, he thought fit to place thereon his name, with these words:
<span class="smcap">PETRUS LAURATI DE SENIS</span>.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img225" id="img225"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-225tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="295" alt="PIETRO LORENZETTI: MADONNA AND CHILD WITH S.S. FRANCIS AND JOHN" title="" /> <span class="caption">PIETRO LORENZETTI: MADONNA AND CHILD WITH S.S. FRANCIS AND JOHN<br/>(<i>Assisi: Lower Church of S. Francesco. Fresco</i>)</span>
<br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-225.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p>Pietro was summoned, next, in the year 1355, by Messer Guglielmo,
arch-priest, and by the Wardens of Works of the Pieve of Arezzo, who
were then Margarito Boschi and others; and in that church, built long
before with better design and manner than any other that had been made
in Tuscany up to that time, and all adorned with squared stone and with
carvings, as it has been said, by the hand of Margaritone, he painted in
fresco the apse and the whole great niche of the chapel of the
high-altar, making there twelve scenes from the life of Our Lady with
figures large as life, beginning with the expulsion of Joachim from the
Temple, up to the Nativity of Jesus Christ. In these scenes, wrought in
fresco, may be recognized almost the same inventions (the lineaments,
the air of the heads, and the attitudes of the figures) which had been
characteristic of and peculiar to Giotto, his master. And although all
this work is beautiful, what he painted on the vaulting of this niche is
without doubt better than all the rest, for in representing the Madonna
ascending into Heaven, besides making the Apostles each four braccia
high, wherein he showed greatness of spirit and was the first to try to
give grandness to the manner, he gave so beautiful an air to the heads
and so great loveliness to the vestments that in those times nothing
more could have been desired. Likewise, in the faces of a choir of
angels who are flying in the air round the Madonna, dancing with
graceful movements, and appearing to sing, he painted a gladness
truly<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN></span> angelic and divine, above all because he made the angels
sounding diverse instruments, with their eyes all fixed and intent on
another choir of angels, who, supported by a cloud in the form of an
almond, are bearing the Madonna to Heaven, with beautiful attitudes and
all surrounded by rainbows. This work, seeing that it rightly gave
pleasure, was the reason that he was commissioned to make in distemper
the panel for the high-altar of the aforesaid Pieve; wherein, in five
parts, with figures as far as the knees and large as life, he made Our
Lady with the Child in her arms, and S. John the Baptist and S. Matthew
on the one side, and on the other the Evangelist and S. Donatus, with
many little figures in the predella and in the border of the panel
above, all truly beautiful and executed in very good manner. This panel,
after I had rebuilt the high-altar of the aforesaid Pieve completely
anew, at my own expense and with my own hand, was set up over the altar
of S. Cristofano at the foot of the church. Nor do I wish to grudge the
labour of saying in this place, with this occasion and not wide of the
subject, that I, moved by Christian piety and by the affection that I
bear towards this venerable and ancient collegiate church, and for the
reason that in it, in my earliest childhood, I learnt my first lessons,
and that it contains the remains of my fathers: moved, I say, by these
reasons, and by it appearing to me that it was wellnigh deserted, I have
restored it in a manner that it can be said that it has returned from
death to life; for besides changing it from a dark to a well-lighted
church by increasing the windows that were there before and by making
others, I have also removed the choir, which, being in front, used to
occupy a great part of the church, and to the great satisfaction of
those reverend canons I have placed it behind the high-altar. This new
altar, standing by itself, has on the panel in front a Christ calling
Peter and Andrew from their nets, and on the side towards the choir it
has, on another panel, S. George slaying the Dragon. On the sides are
four pictures, and in each of these are two saints as large as life.
Then above, and below in the predella, there is an infinity of other
figures, which, for brevity's sake, are not enumerated. The ornamental
frame of this altar is thirteen braccia high, and the predella is two
braccia<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span> high. And because within it is hollow, and one ascends to it by
a staircase through an iron wicket very conveniently arranged, there are
preserved in it many venerable relics, which can be seen from without
through two gratings that are in the front part; and among others there
is the head of S. Donatus, Bishop and Protector of that city, and in a
coffer of variegated marble, three braccia long, which I have had
restored, are the bones of four Saints. And the predella of the altar,
which surrounds it all right round in due proportion, has in front of it
the tabernacle, or rather ciborium, of the Sacrament, made of carved
wood and all gilt, about three braccia high; which tabernacle is in the
round and can be seen as well from the side of the choir as from in
front. And because I have spared no labour and no expense, considering
myself bound to act thus in honour of God, this work, in my judgment,
has in all those ornaments of gold, of carvings, of paintings, of
marbles, of travertines, of variegated marbles, of porphyries, and of
other stones, the best that could be got together by me in that place.</p>
<p>But returning now to Pietro Laurati; that panel finished whereof there
has been talk above, he wrought in S. Pietro at Rome many works which
were afterwards destroyed in making the new building of S. Pietro. He
also wrought some works in Cortona and in Arezzo, besides those that
have been mentioned, and some others in the Church of S. Fiora e
Lucilla, a monastery of Black Friars, and in particular, in a chapel, a
S. Thomas who is putting his hand on the wound in the breast of Christ.</p>
<p>A disciple of Pietro was Bartolommeo Bologhini of Siena, who wrought
many panels in Siena and other places in Italy, and in Florence there is
one by his hand on the altar of the Chapel of S. Silvestro in S. Croce.
The pictures of these men date about the year of our salvation 1350; and
in my book, so many times cited, there is seen a drawing by the hand of
Pietro, wherein a shoemaker who is sewing, with simple but very natural
lineaments, shows very great expression and the characteristic manner of
Pietro, the portrait of whom, by the hand of Bartolommeo Bologhini, was
in a panel in Siena, when I copied it from the original in the manner
that is seen above.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="img229" id="img229"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-229tb.jpg" width-obs="600" height-obs="557" 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 of the</i> Roman School. <i>Assisi: Upper Church of S.
Francesco</i>)</span><br/><span class="link"><SPAN href="images/illus-229.jpg">View larger image</SPAN></span></div>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>]</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span><br/></p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span></p>
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