MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)
MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)
MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)
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MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)
7 更多
Property of a Distinguished Private Collector
MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)

A triptych: Eight scenes of the Passion of Christ, with Saints Peter and Paul on the outer wings

细节
MASTER OF FOSSA (ACTIVE UMBRIA, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 14TH CENTURY)
A triptych: Eight scenes of the Passion of Christ, with Saints Peter and Paul on the outer wings
tempera and gold on panel
Central panel: 19 ¾ x 12 ¼ in. (50.2 x 31.3 cm.); left wing: 19 ½ x 6 1⁄8 in. (49.5 x 16.5 cm.); right wing; 19 ¾ x 6 ¼ in. (50.2 x 15.9 cm.)
来源
Johann Anton Ramboux (1790-1866), Cologne, by 1842.
Acquired by the Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne, 1867.
with Dr. Hermann Burg Galerie, Cologne, 1922.
with Julius Böhler, Munich, acquired from the above 9 April 1925, as Giovanni Di Ugolino da Milano or Riminese School, circa 1410 (inv. no. 25-070), where acquired 13 November 1929 by
Alfred C. Barnes, Philadelphia, as Riminese School, circa 1410, from whom acquired on 23 November 1929 by the following,
with Julius Wilhelm Böhler, Lucerne, until at least 1938, as Riminese School, circa 1410 (inv. no. 29-139).
(Possibly) Eugene Garbaty, Berlin and then New York, acquired from the above, 19 April 1938.
(Possibly) with Julius Wilhelm Böhler, Lucerne and New York, 1949, as Riminese School, circa 1410.
(Possibly) with Kleinberger Galleries, New York.
(Possibly) Private collection, England.
[The Property of a Lady]; Christie's, London, 10 July 1987, lot 93, as The Master of the Poldi Pezzoli Diptych.
Private collection, New York.
with Roy Fisher Fine Arts Inc., New York, 1995-96.
with Silviano Lodi, Campione d'Italia, 1998.
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 8 July 2009, lot 24, as The Master of Fossa, where acquired after the sale by the present owner.
出版
J. A. Ramboux, Katalog der Gemälde alter italienischer Meister (1221-1610) in der Sammlung des Conservator J.A. Ramboux, Cologne, 1862, p. 48, no. 289.
J. A. Ramboux, Katalog der Gemälde-Sammlung des Museums Wallraf-Richartz in Köln, Cologne, 1877.
K. Niessen, Verzeichnis der Gemälde-Sammlung des Museums Wallraf-Richartz in Köln, Cologne, 1877, p. 92, no. 756, as 'Puccio Capanna, c. 1334'.
C. Brandi, Mostra della pittura riminese del trecento, Rimini, 1935, p. XXXIII, as 'Bolognese school'.
R. van Marle, 'Contributo allo studio della scuola pittorica del Trecento a Rimini,' Rimini, IV, 1935, 7-8, pp. 1-20.
R. Longhi, La pittura umbra della prima metà del trecento nelle dispense redatte da Mina Gregori del corso 1953-54, Florence, 1973, pp. 38-39, plate 130-133, as 'The Master of the Böhler Triptych'.
F. Todini, in La Pittura in Italia. Il Duecento e il Trecento, E. Castelnuovo, ed., Milan, 1985, II, p. 406.
F. Todini, La Pittura Umbra. Dal Duecento al Primo Cinquecento, I, Milan, 1989, p. 141, plate XVI; II, p. 149, fig. 316, as 'The Master of Fossa'.
M. Natale, Pittura Italiana dal '300 al '500, Milan, 1991, p. 160, as Tthe Master of the Poldi Pezzoli Diptych'.
H. Kier and F. Günter Zehnder, Lust und Verlust II: Corpus-Band zu Kölner Gemäldesammlungen 1800-1860, II, Cologne, 1998, p. 581, no. 289, as 'The Master of Fossa, also known as the Master of the Böhler Triptych'.
L. Sbaraglio, in The Alana Collection, Newark, Delaware, USA: Italian Paintings from the 14th to 16th Century, III, S. Chiodo and S. Padovani eds., Florence, 2014, pp.166-174, no. 23.
A. Delpriori, La scuola di Spoleto: immagini dipinte e scolpite nel Trecento tra Valle Umbra e Valnerina, Perugia, 2015, pp. 237-241, plate VIII.32.
展览
Cologne, Josef-Haubrich-Kunsthalle, Lust und Verlust. Kölner Sammler zwischen Trikolore und Preußenadler, 28 October 1995-28 January 1996, no. 189 (cat. by R. Krischel).
Trevi, Museo di San Francesco; Spoleto, Museo Diocesano, Basilica di Sant’Eufemia; Spoleto, Museo Nazionale del Ducato; Montefalco, Complesso Museale di San Francesco; and Scheggino, Spazio Arte Valcasana, Capolavori del Trecento. Il cantiere di Giotto, Spoleto e l'Appennino, 24 June-4 November 2018, no. 24 (cat. by A. Delpriori).

荣誉呈献

Jennifer Wright
Jennifer Wright Head of Department

拍品专文

An important and early representation of Umbrian School painting, this remarkable triptych was painted by an anonymous artist working in Spoleto in the early fourteenth century and is notable for remaining complete. A corpus of work by the Master of Fossa was first assembled by Roberto Longhi in the 1950s. He named the Master of Fossa after a tabernacle formerly from the church of Santa Maria ad Cryptas in Fossa, near L’Aquila. At that time, Longhi coined a separate name for the author of the present work: the Master of the Böhler Triptych, in reference to its provenance in the first half of the twentieth century, when it was in the possession of the dealer Julius Böhler in Munich (loc. cit.). The triptych had previously been regarded by scholars to have been of Riminese or Bolognese origins. Longhi was the first to return it to the environs of Spoleto.

Filippo Todini would subsequently identify Longhi’s Master of Fossa and Master of the Böhler Triptych as one and the same, although the present triptych would continue on occasion to be associated with similar Umbrian hands, including the Master of the Poldi Pezzoli Diptych (Mauro Natale, loc. cit.). After recent extensive study by Alessandro Delpriori and Lorenzo Sbaraglio, both of whom date the triptych to circa 1325-30, the attribution to the Master of Fossa is now largely unchallenged and has been recently endorsed by Mauro Natale.

Most authors, regardless of how they have attributed the triptych, have noted the assimilation of earlier Sienese precedents into the master’s Umbrian aesthetic, agreeing on a tangible stylistic relationship with the narrative fresco cycles of Pietro Lorenzetti and Simone Martini. Longhi, in particular, observed a greater subtlety and definition of sentiment in the artist’s hand than in that of other Umbrian masters. A distinct sensitivity to nature is discernible in the depiction of the landscape in the Agony in the Garden; Sbaraglio draws comparisons with the undulating mountains in Simone Martini’s fresco scene of St Martin Renouncing Earthly Weapons (Cappella di San Martino, Lower Basilica di San Francesco, Assisi).

The triptych was most likely commissioned for private devotion. It depicts the Passion of Christ across eight distinct scenes; no particular emphasis is given to the Crucifixion itself, and Delpriori has commented on the tendency of the Spoleto masters to place greater primacy on narrative than on one central image. Yet they did not bind themselves to a conventional reading of the narrative from left to right, and the current triptych presents no exception. In the nineteenth century, the wings were detached and possibly joined together independently of the central panel; the work was restored to its triptych format in the early 1900s.

We are grateful to Prof. Mauro Natale for endorsing the attribution on the basis of photographs.

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