Details, Explanation and Meaning About Giotto di Bondone

Giotto di Bondone Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Giotto di Bondone (better known as just Giotto, 1267-1337) was an Italian painter. He is generally considered the first in a line of great artists who contributed to and developed the Italian Renaissance.

Giotto was born in poverty in the countryside near Florence, the son of Bondone, a peasant, and was himself a shepherd. Most authors believe that Giotto was directly his real name, and not an abbreviation of Ambrogio (Ambrogiotto) or Angelo (Angiolotto).

The legend says (as reported by Giorgio Vasari in his biographies, derived from Ghiberti's Commentari) that at the age of 10, while attending the sheep, he used to draw on the rocks with chalk. Cimabue saw him drawing a sheep, so natural and so perfect that he immediately asked his father if he could bring Giotto with him to let him study art, and Giotto's career would have started in Cimabue's bottega.

His art was extremely innovative, and is commonly considered as a precursor of that evolution which was to lead, shortly after, to the explosion of the Italian Rinascimento. Before him figures were treated as flat, decorative symbols. But he managed to adopt the visual language of the sculptors — by lending his figures volume and weight. Compare his Madonna to the work by his predecessor and teacher. This illustrates why to his contemporaries Giotto's paintings were miracles of naturalism.

He treated the religious themes (quite exclusively used in medieval art) with a new spirit, rendering them with a clear freshness and an unexpected liveliness, and many critics talk about a "human emotion" as the most peculiar feature of his works.

He received commissions for many works throughout Italy, and became a good friend of the king of Naples, as well as of Dante Alighieri. Boccaccio cited him in his Decameron.

According to one story, Pope Benedict IX wanted to employ Giotto, and sent an emissary to visit the artist. The messenger asked Giotto for a drawing he could submit to the pope, to prove the artist's worth. Giotto smiled and took a sheet of paper, dipped his brush in red paint, closed his arm to his side, and with one twist of his wrist he drew a perfect circle freehand. Giotto handed this drawing to the messenger, who stared back in disbelief. "Is this the only drawing I'm to have?" asked the messenger. Giotto answered, "It's more than enough. Send it along and you'll see whether it's understood."

Famous works include:

See also:

With evident dedication to the painter, Giotto is also the name of a ESA space mission for the observation of Halley's comet (see Giotto mission), and is also the name for a Linux bootable floppy disk (see Giotto (floppy)).

     

This is an Article on Giotto di Bondone. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Giotto di Bondone


Google
 
Web www.E-paranoids.com

Search Anything