Derbes Anne, Siena and The Levant in The Later Dugento
Derbes Anne, Siena and The Levant in The Later Dugento
Derbes Anne, Siena and The Levant in The Later Dugento
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FIGURE 2. Guido da Siena, Madonna and Child, from the San Domenico Altarpiece, ca. 1275-80, Siena, Palazzo Pubblico (photo: Alinari).
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Sis in 1272 (Fig. 6).14 Here, too, the Virgin swoons into
the arms of the holy women; her stance, with left arm bent
at the elbow and right arm dangling limply, is very close
to her stance in the icon. It is not identical, however. In
the icon the holy woman on the right places her hand at
Mary's armpit, so that her unsupported left arm bends at
the elbow in defiance of gravity, whereas in the manuscript
the holy woman's hand is far more logically placed under
Mary's forearm. Other details also tend to link the two
works, such as the gesturing, cowled centurion and helmeted, spear-bearing soldiers to the right, and especially
the mourning angels in the manuscript, which are virtual
twins of those in the icon.
A second Cilician manuscript, the Gospels of Prince
Vasak, includes a very similar version of the Crucifixion
(Fig. 7). Dated less precisely than the Keran Gospels, this
manuscript is generally placed around 1270.15 In some
respects its Crucifixion is not as close to the icon as the
version in the Keran Gospels: conventional angels replace
the distinctive mourning angels, John holds a book, the
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ca. 1270, was in fact executed slightly later, that is, after
the Keran Gospels of 1272. Alternatively, we can speculate
that a third example, which included both the dotted
haloes and the Pisanesque details, was available to both
artists, and that the Keran master merely reproduced it
more conscientiously than did his colleague.26
We can fairly readily imagine how these motifs from
Nicola's Crucifixion were transmitted to the Levant. His
pulpit greatly impressed central Italian painters; many
writers have noted both the depth and the persistence of
its influence. His Crucifixion in particular made an impact
on his contemporaries, several of whom freely borrowed
central elements from it. Thus, an Umbrian master working in the 1270s (Fig. 13) appropriated his swooning
Virgin, even imitating Nicola in turning the Virgin away
from Christ.27Here the single nail affixing Christ's feet to
the cross may also derive from the Siena relief, and both
that motif and the striated loincloth recall the Crusader
icon (Fig. 4). But reverberations of Nicola's pulpit were
strongest in Siena.28 In a Guidesque Crucifixion at Yale
(Fig. 14), probably of the 1270s, both the single nail
piercing Christ's feet and much of the right portion, such
as the crouching figure in the corner, reflect Nicola's
design.29This Guidesque panel also seems linked with the
icon (Fig. 4) in several respects: the stance of John, the
uncommon gesture of the centurion, who raises both his
index finger and little finger in acclamation, the unusual
prominence accorded Mary Magdalen,30 and again, the
striated loincloth. The Crusader icon therefore seems
closely related to the Yale panel and the Umbrian cross in
several ways, not the least of which is their common debt
to the Siena relief. It thus appears that some version of
Nicola's composition of 1268, probably painted by an
artist close to Guido, had migrated to the Levant by 1272
and perhaps as early as 1270.
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FIGURE 11. Nicola Pisano, Crucifixion, from the Pisa pulpit, 1260,
Pisa, Baptistry (photo: Alinari).
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Sienese had joined other Italian merchants in the Mediterranean East at precisely the date suggested by the visual
evidence. A document of 1268, published in the nineteenth
century, informs us that in July 1268 Conrad II, or Conradin, King of Jerusalem, conceded to Siena exemptions
from taxes and privileges of commerce in Acre.33News of
this grant must have been hailed by Sienese merchants and
financiers. The Sienese had traded in Acre earlier in the
century, but without privileges of commerce; they circumvented this problem by representing themselves as Pisans
196
Guido was the link between Nicola's relief and the Eastern
works it spawned.
Despite this confluence of time and place, several
qualifications are necessary. First, the icon with the swooning Virgin (Fig. 4) was not necessarily executed at Acre,
nor was its painter necessarily trained there. The number
and variety of surviving versions of the type suggests that
others must have existed. Further, the constant flow of
people and objects along the major routes of the Levant,
just where the compositions occur, makes it impossible to
specify a point of origin within the Mediterranean East.
Given Acre's preeminent position as a hub of Levantine
commerce, it remains a plausible port of entry from which
the composition could have passed, in one form or another,
to Cilicia,37 Sinai, and Cyprus, but other scenarios are
likely too. The possibility that at least some of the compositions and motifs discussed here entered the Levant via
Cilicia or Cyprus should not be dismissed. Cilicia had
extensive independent contacts with the West during the
thirteenth century,38 and Cyprus had been in Western
hands since 1191, when Richard Coeur de Lion conquered
the island; it served as a major commercial center and base
for crusaders throughout the thirteenth century.39
Other groups may also have contributed to the evident
popularity of the Pisanesque composition in the Levant.
In particular, a case can be made for the Franciscan
Order. Der Nersessian has suggested that the Franciscans
were responsible for the nearly simultaneous appearance
of one image, the Madonna of Misericordia, in Cilicia and
Siena, and Helen Evans has considerably expanded her
arguments.40 In tenor and in specific features, our composition would certainly have appealed to the order. As
noted above, the icon (Fig. 4) distinguishes itself from the
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FIGURE 15. Virgin and Child, later thirteenth century, Mount Sinai,
Monastery of Saint Catherine (reproduced through the courtesy of the
Michigan-Princeton-Alexandria Expedition to Mount Sinai).
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FIGURE 17. Nativity, Gospels of Queen Keran, 1272, Jerusalem, Armenian Patriarchate, Ms. 2563, fol. 21 (photo: Library of Congress).
FIGURE 16. Dedication page, Gospels of Prince Vasak, ca. 1270, Jerusalem, Armenian Patriarchate, Ms. 2568, fol. 320 (photo: Library of
Congress).
FIGURE 18. Nicola Pisano, Adoration of the Magi, from the Siena
pulpit, 1265-68, Siena, Cathedral (photo: Alinari).
NOTES
*
2.
3.
F. Deuchler, Duccio (Milan, 1984), 24. See also J. White, Art and
Architecture in Italy, 1250-1400, 2nd ed. (London, 1987), 297. In
his monograph, however, White argued that such a sojourn is not
necessary to explain the Eastern elements of Duccio's style; see
Duccio: Tuscan Art and the Medieval Workshop (London, 1979),
55-58.
4.
7.
200
Stubblebine, Guido, fig. 26. See also fig. 59 and idem, Duccio, pls.
103-9. This variant is not, however, confined to Siena; it occurs
elsewhere, as in an Umbrian version of the Stripping of Christ; see
F. Santi, Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria. Dipinti, sculpture, e oggetti d'arte di eta romanica e gotica (Rome, 1969), fig. 12c. The
generic chapel-de-fer was widely diffused, and even appears occasionally in Crusader manuscripts: see Folda, Crusader Manuscript
Illumination, figs. 101, 165. In these examples, the helmet lacks the
ridge and knob seen in the Crusader icon and the panel by Guido.
22. For the Theodore Psalter, dated 1066, see S. Der Nersessian,
L'Illustration des psautiers grecs du Moyen Age, II: Londres, Add.
19352, Bibliotheque des Cahiers Archeologiques, V (Paris, 1970);
For other instances, see the Gelat Gospels (Tbilisi, Institute of
Manuscripts, fol. 136v.), T. Velmans, La peinture murale byzantine
h lafin du Moyen Age, I, Biblioth'que des Cahiers Archeologiques,
XI (Paris, 1977), fig. 128, or the fresco at Sopo'ani, ibid., fig. 131.
Occasionally the women, not St. John, support Mary, as in the
Mavriotissa, Kastoria; see A. Wharton Epstein, "Middle Byzantine
Churches of Kastoria," AB, LXII (1980), 202-7 and idem, "Frescoes
of the Mavriotissa Monastery near Kastoria," Gesta, XXI (1982),
21-29.
23.
24. For the Oblate Master, see Garrison, Italian Romanesque Panel
Painting, 24, no. 243. The three-nail Crucifixion is generally believed
to have been introduced to Italy by Nicola Pisano; see E. Angiola,
"Nicola Pisano: The Pisa Baptistry Pulpit," (Dissertation, Columbia,
New York, 1975), 60. Among the earliest examples of a fully developed swooning Virgin in Italy is one in a manuscript in Cividale del
201
surprising; the two were closely linked in the later Dugento, and
Meiss has referred to Umbria as "an outpost of the Sienese style"
("A Dugento Altarpiece at Antwerp," BM, LXXI, [1937], 24).
Recently Pace, "Import-Export. I," 336-37, has posited "mutual
exchanges between Cilicia and Umbria." There are several aspects
of the icons discussed here that especially recall Umbrian art, as I
pointed out in a paper read at Binghamton in 1980. But the
interconnections between Umbria and Siena, and their relationship
with the art of the Levant, require further study. Suggestive of the
complexity of these issues is the Umbrian triptych in Perugia that
Pace and Grape have associated with Cilician illumination (ibid.;
Grape, Grenzprobleme, 145); Stubblebine has argued (Guido, 5457, 59) that the program of this panel reflects Guido da Siena's San
Domenico Altarpiece. (Stubblebine's reconstruction of the altarpiece has not been universally accepted; see, for instance, Van Os,
Sienese Altarpieces, 28.)
28.
For motifs that both Guido da Siena and Duccio derived from
Nicola, see Stubblebine, Guido, 92; M. Meiss, "A New Early
Duccio," AB, XXXIII (1951), 101-2; B. Cole, Sienese Painting
from its Origins to the Fifteenth Century (New York, 1980), 3-4;
Carli, Sienese Painting, 3; Van Os, Sienese Altarpieces, 34.
29. The debt to Nicola has long been observed; see Stubblebine,
Guido, 92. Stubblebine dated this panel to the 1280s, stating that
elements here derive from the Crucifixion from Badia Ardenga,
which he places in the early 1280s. However, the resemblance to
that panel is merely generic, while the ties to Nicola's relief are far
more precise. A date closer to the relief thus seems more likely. The
Yale panel is also dated to the 1270s by Garrison, Italian Romanesque Panel Painting, no. 298. C. Seymour's date of 1260-70 (Early
Italian Paintings in the Yale University Art Gallery [New Haven
and London, 1970], 14-15) seems too early; the panel must postdate
Nicola's relief, completed in 1268.
30. Interestingly, she also plays a prominent role in a panel already
cited, the Santa Maria Primerana Master's Crucifixion; see n. 24.
There, as in the Guidesque panel, she is placed at the foot of the
cross.
31. G. Golubovich, Biblioteca bio-bibliografica della Terre Sante e
dell'Orientefrancescana, I (Florence, 1906), 254, 299-300.
32.
33. G. MUller, ed. Documenti sulle relazione delle citta toscane coll'oriente cristiano e coi turchi (Florence, 1879), 100. D. Abulafia,
"Marseilles, Acre and the Mediterranean," in Coinage in the Latin
East, ed. P. W. Edbury and D. M. Metcalf (Oxford, 1980), 38,
n. 39, states that the grant would have cut taxes on imports and
exports to only 1%.
34.
202
41.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
ViArge,"
Evans, "Cilician Illumination." See also Der Nersessian, "La
592-95.
49.
Der Nersessian, "La Vibrge," 592-95. See also the two papers by
Evans cited in n. 40.
50.
Stubblebine, Guido, 8.
55.
56.
57.
Deuchler, Duccio, 24, 42, 46, fig. 27; Young, "Byzantine Painting,"
342-72.
58.
Der Nersessian, "La Vierge," 192-95. The first known image of the
Madonna of Mercy appeared on a lost banner given to a Roman
confraternity in 1267; for a comprehensive study of the theme, see
the recent dissertation by William Levin, "Studies in the Imagery of
Mercy in Late Medieval Italian Art," 3 v. (Dissertation, University
of Michigan, 1983), especially 437-501. Though Levin views the
theme in general as Western, he assumes that an Eastern variant
existed, and considers the Cilician manuscript in the Stoclet collection and Duccio's panel as examples of that variant (439 and 52122, n. 5). Other scholars place the origins of the theme more
definitely in the East; see, for instance, C. Belting-Ihm, Sub matris
tutela. Untersuchen zur Vorgeschichte der Schutzmantelmadonna
(Heidelberg, 1976), 68-9, who stresses the connection with the
Byzantine Blachernitissa, and Belting, "The 'Byzantine' Madonnas,"
20, who likewise argues that Duccio's panel reflects "the milieu of
the so-called Crusader art in the Eastern Mediterranean."
Without question, the veneration of the Virgin's mantle began
in Constantinople; the relic was enshrined at the Church of the
Blachernae, and the image of the Blachernitissa, in which the Virgin
extends her hands in an orant stance and thus emphasizes the
mantle, reflects that veneration; see Levin, "Studies," 473-81. But,
as Levin makes clear, the Blachernitissa bears little resemblance to
the Western image of the Madonna of Mercy. The Blachernitissa is
invariably an isolated figure, while the Western version includes
human supplicants seeking protection beneath the Virgin's outstretched mantle. Though the examples by Duccio and the Cilician
illuminators are not as symmetrical and axial as later Western
versions of the scene, their compositions are far more closely
connected to the Western image than to the Blachernitissa. Legends
of the Virgin offering shelter beneath her mantle were transmitted to
the West fairly early, and were well established in the West by the
twelfth and thirteenth centuries; see Levin, "Studies," 481-87. On
the development of the image in the West, see also the recent study
by S. Solway, "A Numismatic Source of the Madonna of Mercy,"
AB, LXVII (1985), 359-68. Solway claims that the theme first
appears on Cistercian seals of the fourteenth century; she does not
discuss Duccio's panel or the Eastern examples.
203
61. On the iconography of the Magi, See H. Kehrer, Die Heiligen Drei
Konige in Literatur und Kunst (Leipzig, 1908).
62. As J. Poeschke notes (Die Sieneser Domkanzel des Nicola Pisano
[Berlin, 1973], 17), this marks a change from the Pisa pulpit, where
the more conventional genuflectingpose appeared. See G. Swarzinski,
Nicola Pisano (Frankfort am Main, 1926), 37, for a discussion of
other innovative aspects of this scene.
63.
Stubblebine, Guido, 46, fig. 21. For the reliefs in Pisa, see Kehrer,
Kanige, figs. 56, 59. The inclusion of the horses seems to originate
in early Gothic France; see R. D. Wallace, L'Influence de la France
204