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Artist Tour
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Tour: Artist Tour Room 64: Renaissance Art and Ideas 1400-1550
Adoration of the Kings
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FEMALE NARRATOR:
The gilded altarpiece facing this audio point was made in Germany in about 1500 – 1520. It is slightly more than a metre, or three feet, in width and height and depicts three kings offering gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh to the infant Christ. The panel once had two side wings attached, but they’re now lost. Above the main scene is a delicately carved curved band of ornate foliage.In the centre sits the Virgin Mary, holding the naked Christ Child in her lap. Her long hair curls onto her shoulders and she wears a white veil on her head. The Virgin’s expression is serene. The skin of her face is painted a pale pink and her cheeks are rosy. The infant is similarly delicately painted. The Virgin and Child are sitting in the shelter of a dilapidated stable. Parts of the straw roof are missing and an archway behind them is broken. This broken building symbolises the old order that Christ will supplant. The Virgin and Child are flanked by the three kings and Saint Joseph. The eldest king, Caspar, kneels to the left of the Virgin. His head is bowed and his hands are pressed together in prayer as the Child blesses him. Caspar is balding and his beard hangs down to his chest. He wears a gilded robe with the side pinned up by a jewelled clasp, displaying one heavy boot. Originally his boots would have been silver but they’ve become black through oxidisation. Saint Joseph stands to the left of Caspar holding a casket in his right hand. He’s also bearded and balding, although a small forelock remains above his brows.
On the right-hand side, Balthasar, the middle-aged king, kneels to present his offering. He holds a decorative cup in his left hand. He has a full head of wavy hair reaching to his shoulders and his beard is thick and black. His gilded robe has double sleeves with one hanging down by his side, a sign of high status. Balthasar also has a satchel over his shoulder decorated with two scallop shells, symbols of pilgrimage.
To his right stands the third king, identified as Melchior by the letters MELCH inscribed into his left sleeve. Melchior is black with short curling black hair and a youthful face. He wears a gold earring and a gold chain around his neck. He’s dressed in a gilded knee-length gown. A sword hangs from his belt.
The story of the kings is recorded briefly in the gospel of St Matthew. By 1300 the kings usually represented the Three Ages of Man – Youth, Middle Age and Old Age – as well as the known world of the time, Europe, Africa and Asia. These depictions were a sign to worshippers that all of humanity would recognise Christ’s authority.
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Tour: Artist Tour Room 64: Renaissance Art and Ideas 1400-1550
A wax model by Michelangelo
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MALE NARRATOR:
In one of the cases in front of this audio point, there is a small reddish wax model showing the contorted figure of a male nude. It was made by Michelangelo, arguably the greatest artist of the sixteenth century. It was made as a study for a figure of a slave — one of 40 large marble statues that were planned to decorate the tomb of Pope Julius II. But Michelangelo, who received the commission in 1505, was kept so busy by the Pope and his succesors that he never completed the tomb.Many of the objects in this part of the gallery are models, rather than finished works of art. They show the early stages in the creative process when an artist is exploring and developing ideas. Models helped a sculptor to finalise a design before carving in marble or other expensive materials. Wax was an ideal material to make quick sketches as it becomes supple when warm and can be shaped and re-worked as an idea changes.
Michelangelo destroyed many of his preparatory models. But his fame — as well as a growing interest in the creative process — led collectors to acquire and preserve some of his drawings and models. Thanks to generations of collectors who treasured this fragile wax model, it has survived for more than 500 years.
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Tour: Artist Tour Room 64a: Donatello and the Making of Art 1400-1500
Donatello's Ascension Relief
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FEMALE NARRATOR:
The white marble panel on the wall in front of this audio point dates from about 1428 to 1430 and was made in Florence. It shows Christ ascending in majesty, giving the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven to St Peter, as the Virgin Mary and the apostles look on in wonder, awe and grief. The rectangular panel is almost half a metre, or 18 inches, high and a little over a metre, or 3 feet, wide. The panel shows one of the finest examples of the technique of carving in rilievo schiacciato, or ‘squashed relief,’ by Donatello, the sculptor who’s credited with inventing it.The figure of Christ dominates the centre of the panel. He appears to be hovering within a mandorla, an almond-shape made up of clouds, and is surrounded by four small angels. To Christ’s right, the stocky, bearded figure of St Peter reaches up to accept the keys to Heaven. To Christ’s left is his mother, Mary. Unusually, Donatello has portrayed her as an elderly woman, her head and body swathed in a cloak, with only the profile of her careworn face and one outspread hand visible. She kneels, with her face upturned towards her son. The triangular positioning of Christ, Mary and St Peter at the centre of the panel invites the viewer to join the group as a spectator. So does the grouping of the apostles, facing Christ in an arc. Behind St Peter, the first apostle has his arm outstretched towards the risen Christ and his head turned back to his companions as if he is urging them to witness the miraculous sight. Behind him, barely sketched on the surface, is another apostle. The next figure has his eyes downcast and his hands raised, the palms towards Christ – perhaps in denial, perhaps overcome by emotion. The fourth is shown in strong profile, his hands lifted to chest height, his body half-concealing another who is carved in lower relief.
Standing behind Mary on the left of the panel are more apostles, each carved in successively shallower relief. Their faces are gaunt and hollow-eyed as they look up at Christ. Partly concealed behind the third of these apostles are the smaller, fainter figures of two more. The main figures are carved in a relief of no more than two centimetres in depth, but the drapery of their cloaks and the detail of their faces are magnificently carved to suggest fully three-dimensional forms.
Donatello’s technical genius is shown in the way he uses ever-shallower relief to suggest an extreme depth of perspective. A pair of angels stands to the far left of the panel, their arms around each other. By carving them smaller and in a lower relief than the apostles and Christ, Donatello suggests that they are behind the main group. A line of trees stands on rolling hills behind these angels, diminishing in size and becoming fainter as they recede towards the horizon, where the tiny city of Jerusalem is lightly sketched.