Monastic "Imitatio Christi": Andrea del Castagno's "Cenacolo di S. Apollonia"
This article proposes an interpretation of the choice, placement and rendering of the scenes painted for the female Florentine convent (c. 1447) in its religious context. The "Last Supper" is read as an "imago" that presented the nuns with important exemplars--the apostles, who w...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Artibus et historiae 2003-01, Vol.24 (47), p.31-50 |
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description | This article proposes an interpretation of the choice, placement and rendering of the scenes painted for the female Florentine convent (c. 1447) in its religious context. The "Last Supper" is read as an "imago" that presented the nuns with important exemplars--the apostles, who were the model of a communal life in "imitatio Christi." Castagno encourages their contemplation rather than that of the event by the depiction of gestures that characterize them as individuals. In the "Crucifixion, Entombment" and "Resurrection" Castagno emphasizes the narrative, concentrating on the bystanders' grief. While the apostles were models for monks and nuns alike, here Castagno provided the nuns of S. Apollonia with suitable female models. |
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subjects | Apostles Crosses Crucifixion Fresco Gestures Imitatio Legends Nuns Renaissance art Saints legends |
title | Monastic "Imitatio Christi": Andrea del Castagno's "Cenacolo di S. Apollonia" |
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