Piero Della Francesca in Oxford Art Online
Piero Della Francesca in Oxford Art Online
only one record of his presence there. On 12 September 1439 he is documented with Domenico Veneziano in a payment relating to the decoration (destr.) of S Egidio (now S Maria Nuova), then the most important Florentine fresco cycle since the Brancacci Chapel (Florence, S Maria del Carmine). Piero was inspired by Domenicos ordered, rationally lit compositions (especially his St Lucy altarpiece of the 1440s), as well as by his calm, pale Madonnas, whose ovoid heads and almond eyes reappear in Pieros figures. It is intriguing to imagine the appearance of the work (untraced) that Domenico is documented as having produced in 1450 in Arezzo, where the two painters may have met again.
he doubtless saw examples of work by Rogier van der Weyden or other early Netherlandish painters. Despite the loss of its surface glazes, this work demonstrates Pieros clarity of composition and depiction of cool, morning light. Its poetic, river-crossed landscape, similar to that of the Baptism , precedes that painted by Bono da Ferrara in the Ovetari Chapel (Padua, Eremitani). A slightly later version of the same subject (Venice, Accad.) depicts a donor and a view of a town like Borgo San Sepolcro. Both works have an intensity of feeling entirely befitting the spiritual subject. Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta was one of Pieros most important courtly patrons. His transformation of S Francesco in Rimini into the dynastic Tempio Malatestiano involved Alberti (see fig.), who may have proposed Pieros services for the votive fresco of Sigismondo Malatesta Venerating St Sigismund (1451; detached, in situ). The careful profile of Sigismondo, repeated in a portrait by Piero (Paris, Louvre), contrasts with the relaxed pose of the saint and with the contrapuntal figures of the two greyhounds, in which courtly and symbolic iconography and natural description are merged. The saints hand and orb reveal the painters skill in depicting both regular and irregular solids. As in the Baptism and all of Pieros most successful compositions, there is a visually satisfying sense of interval between the figures here, a remarkable and idiosyncratic feeling for the rhythmical arrangement of solids and voids.
2. Mature works.
(i) Frescoes for S Francesco, Arezzo.
Pieros greatest achievement is the fresco cycle of the Legend of the True Cross (Arezzo, S Francesco; see fig.) illustrating Mans redemption through the story of the wood from the Garden of Eden that became Christs Cross. These narrative scenes contain some of the most original and memorable images of the Renaissance, and Piero della Francesca: Battle of their arrangement, which diverges from the traditional chronology of Heraclius and Chosroes (1453 the Golden Legend , is adapted to Franciscan liturgy. The 4), fresco, sophistication of these paintings is the result of the learned Franciscan programme and the lucid inspiration of Piero. In the initial phase of decoration, the chapel vault and the Last Judgement over the arch facing the nave were painted by the workshop of Bicci di Lorenzo c. 1447. Piero may have begun work very soon thereafter. The commission was the result of a bequest by the Bacci family (the involvement of the humanist Giovanni Bacci, postulated by Ginzburg, is entirely hypothetical). The fresco cycle is undocumented and can be dated only to after 1447, when a partial payment was made by the Bacci to an unnamed painter (usually identified as Bicci); most of the chapel was painted during the early to mid-1450s, and it was certainly finished by 1465. The frescoes may be dated stylistically to a period beginning in the late 1440s (by comparison with the early parts of Pieros own Misericordia altarpiece) and are reflected in works by other artists painted by the late 1450s (Bellosi, Bertelli). One comparable work is by Giovanni da Piamonte, an assistant of Piero whose hand is recognizable in parts of the frescoes. His Virgin and Child with Saints (Citt di Castello, S Maria dei Servi) is signed and dated 1456, which proves that this littleknown painter was an independent master by then. Another work that reflects knowledge of the
lowest tier of frescoes in Arezzo is the St Nicholas predella by Giovanni di Francesco (Florence, Casa Buonarroti), who died in 1459, so adding to the chronological framework. In sizeable sections of the frescoes Pieros design is more evident than his execution; qualitative unevenness reveals that important passages were delegated to an ordinary, even incompetent, assistant. The Raising of the Jew from the Well , for example, was designed by Piero and painted by an assistant (probably Giovanni da Piamonte), but with the correct light-sourcesuch a significant part of Pieros cerebral approach to artreversed. Although Vasaris account of the frescoes in the Vite (1550, rev. 2/1568) is somewhat confused and historically inaccurate, his description is often detailed and perceptive. He noted (Vite, 1568; Eng. trans. by G. de Vere, London, 191214, iii, p. 20): "a row of Corinthian columns, divinely well proportioned [in the Solomon and Sheba scene]; and a peasant who, leaning with his hands on his spade, stands listening [in the Discovery of the Cross scene]. But above every other considerationis his painting of Night, with an angel in foreshortening who is flying with his head downwardsand with his own lightilluminates the pavilion, the men-at-arms, and all the surroundings [the Dream of Constantine ]. Piero gives us to know in this darkness how important it is to copy things as they are." Three essential aspects of Pieros art are touched on here: his interest in perspective, his unaffected naturalism and his skill with light.
(iv) Work for S Agostino, Borgo San Sepolcro and the Madonna del
parto.
On 4 October 1454 Piero had been commissioned by the Augustinian friars of Borgo San Sepolcro and the family of Angelo di Giovanni di Simone and his late brother, Simone di Giovanni di Simone, to paint the high altarpiece of S Agostino. The unusual time limit of eight years suggests that Piero was involved elsewhere at the time. The principal surviving panels of this altarpiece (dispersed), each about 1.330.59 m, are linked by a Classical parapet running behind the figures. These include a solemn depiction of St Augustine (Lisbon, Mus. N. A. Ant.), who bears a crystal crozier and whose cope is decorated with freely handled New Testament scenes; a quietly heroic and dazzlingly bejewelled St Michael (London, N.G.), in which part of the throne base and drapery are visible; St John the Evangelist (New York, Frick), with a corresponding element of the throne at his feet; and a corpulent portrait-like image of St Nicholas of Tolentino (Milan, Mus. Poldi Pezzoli). Smaller panels executed by Pieros workshop and possibly associated with the altarpiece include St Apollonia (Washington, DC, N.G.A.) and two Augustinian saints and a damaged Crucifixion (all three New York, Frick). The Crucifixion contains beautifully depicted horses, which are as monumental as their counterparts in Arezzo and may well be by Piero. Like the Raising of the Jew from the Well scene of the Arezzo frescoes, St Apollonia seems to have been painted by an assistant, as it is lit from the wrong side. Archival research has revealed more information about the patrons involved in this altarpiece commission (Banker, 1987) and evidence of the untraced central panel, a Virgin and Child (Polcri, 1990). The work was not completed until at least 1469, and once again stylistic contrasts within its evolution are apparent, from the St John , contemporary with the Arezzo frescoes, to the luminosity of the St Augustine inspired by the Urbino Flagellation . A figure of a youthful saint, usually identified as St Julian (Sansepolcro, Mus. Civ.), which Piero had frescoed earlier in S Agostino, was discovered in 1954. Only the upper part of the body survives, but this fragment beautifully illustrates his skilful use of lighting and the technique of pouncing. These qualities are also evident in a calm image of incomparable devotional strength, the Madonna del parto (Virgin with Two Angels), which adorns a small reconstructed cemetery chapel (formerly S Maria a Momentana) near Monterchi. The angels revealing the pregnant Virgin were painted from the same cartoon reversed, a device also used in the contemporary Arezzo frescoes, which provides a powerful symmetry. A more monumental female figure, also undocumented and perhaps painted somewhat later, is the frescoed St Mary Magdalene (Arezzo Cathedral), which is partly cropped.
3. Late works.
Piero is recorded in Urbino only once, as the guest of Giovanni Santi on 8 April 1469, when he came to discuss a projected altarpiece for the confraternity of the Corpus Domini, a commission that had passed to Justus of Ghent by 1473. He must have been in frequent contact with the court of Federigo da Montefeltro, however, which provided him with at least two other commissions. The first of these was probably the candid double portrait of Federigo da Montefeltro and his wife Battista Sforza (both Florence, Uffizi), no doubt painted after Battistas premature death in 1472 and partly a celebration of the ruling couples virtues. These are extolled in the elegant humanist Piero della Francesca: Virgin texts on the reverse of each of the bust-length portraits, which have and Child (Brera Altarpiece), mid-1470s (Milan, in the background one of the most beautiful, airy landscape views of the 15th century. The Brera Altarpiece (Virgin and Child ; Milan, Brera), possibly a work of the mid1470s, was in some ways modelled on a Late Gothic altarpiece (1439; Urbino, Pal. Ducale) commissioned from Antonio Alberti by the father of Federigo, Guidantonio da Montefeltro (reg 140443). Both works have a funerary function (Lightbown), and it seems clear that Pieros altarpiece is a votive work, relating Federigo to his heavenly intercessors. Its beauty derives from the extraordinary union of Renaissance architecture (reflecting the style current in Urbino) and figures in an idealized, ecclesiastical setting. The suspended egg, which has elicited much exaggerated exegesis, is sometimes found in funerary chapels; it provides both a symbol of the Resurrection and a formal parallel to the ovoid head of the Virgin. Among Pieros last works are the poetic Nativity (London, N.G.), abraded by old, over zealous cleaning but also damaged by a candle-burn, which suggests that it did once stand as a completed altarpiece, and the Senigallia Madonna (Urbino, Pal. Ducale; ex-Senigallia), an intimate depiction of the Virgin and Child between two silvery-blue and pink angels with a view into a background
room. The extraordinary effect of reflected light from the shuttered window there is a distant prelude to Dutch 17th-century painting.
Frank Dabell
pictura (1435), that painting generally involved a considerable quantity of exact mathematics. Only one leading artist of the 15th century seems to have had an independent reputation as a mathematician: Piero della Francesca. The identification of manuscripts of mathematical works by Piero and their publication confirm Vasaris characterization of him as an able mathematician, much of whose work was incorporated into treatises published after his death by his countryman, and possibly pupil, Luca Pacioli. Vasaris charges that Pacioli was guilty of plagiarism, which thus lowered Pieros later reputation, must be viewed with caution. Notions of copyright took root only slowly with the advent of printing: even in the 1520s, what should now be regarded as a piece of intellectual property, namely a method of solving cubic equations, seems to have been considered to be heritable. Most 15th-century mathematical treatises, including two of Pieros, contained numerous problems taken from earlier treatises. Mathematics, particularly algebra, developed very rapidly in the period immediately after Pieros death, a fact that no doubt contributed to the rapid decline of his reputation as a mathematician; the fortune of Pieros mathematics was not unlike that of his art. Vasari said that Piero wrote many mathematical treatises. Three have been identified: De prospectiva pingendi (On perspective for painting), Trattato dabaco (Abacus treatise) and De quinque corporibus regularibus (On the five regular bodies, i.e. the five regular solids described in Euclids Elements ). The treatise on perspective and the abacus book are both in Italian. The work on the regular solids survives in Latin, but may have been written originally in Italian. The dates of composition are not known exactly, but it is clear, from Pieros own borrowings and references, that the abacus book (probably written in the 1450s) preceded the work on the regular solids and that the latter was completed after the perspective treatise, probably in the decade after 1482. Partly on account of Paciolis plagiarism the contents of all three treatises have rather complicated publishing histories. Complete editions have appeared only in modern times. The treatise least used by Pacioli is the one of most obvious concern to the historian of art, namely De prospectiva pingendi . A manuscript with exquisitely neat diagrams, believed by Nicco Fasola to be autograph, is preserved in Parma (Bib. Palatina, MS. 1576). Several later manuscripts are known (some in Latin), confirming other evidence that the work circulated quite widely in the 16th century. Parts of it were incorporated, with acknowledgement, in Daniele Barbaros La Prattica della perspettiva (Venice, 1569). De prospectiva pingendi is intended as a practical instruction manual. The reader is presumably regarded as an apprentice, since he is called tu throughout and is generally addressed in the imperative while being given detailed instructions for drawing the diagrams. Proofs mainly take the form of merely checking that the result is what Piero asserted. They are usually very brief, much briefer than the drawing instructions. Some proofs are only approximate, suggesting that the successful drawing of the diagram was seen as proof enough. However, a few proofs are fairly elaborate, involving long series of similar triangles and manipulation of ratios. While these techniques are standard for the time, they are not entirely elementary. The apprentice would need to have attended an abacus school to be able to follow such proofs with the fluency Piero seems to expect. (It is probably on account of the level of mathematical skill expected in the reader that De prospectiva pingendi did not find its way into print in the Renaissance.) In the manner of all practical treatises of the time, Pieros work proceeds almost entirely by means of worked examples. Its first book deals with flat patterns (tiled floors and the plans of simple bodies), the second considers various simple solid figures (such as houses, idealized as cuboids), and the third handles more elaborate objects, such as column capitals and human heads. Several diagrams correspond closely with elements found in the fresco cycle the Legend of the True Cross (Arezzo, S Francesco) and presumably reflect Pieros preliminary drawings. Pieros treatise on perspective seems to have been the first of its kind, and it set the pattern for later treatises, although Piero no doubt saw it as part of an established tradition of workshop manuals. The Trattato dabaco belongs in another tradition of practical texts, that of the elementary mathematical treatises used in abacus schools. These treatiseswhich derive their name from the Liber abaci (1202) of Leonardo of Pisa (c. 1170?1250)are largely concerned with arithmetic, but usually also contain a little algebra and may sometimes include a few geometrical problems. The exposition is by series of worked examples. Pieros Trattato is written in this way, though the introduction makes it clear that the work was not written for use in a school, but at the request of a friend or patron. It was probably a manual for merchants and was dedicated to a member of a local family, the Pichi (related to Pieros own family). There are two known manuscripts of the work; the one Arrighi believes to be autograph is in Florence (Bib. MediceaLaurenziana, MS. Ashb. 280/359291). Most of Pieros arithmetical and algebraic problems can be found in earlier treatises, but his geometrical problems, of which there is an unusually large number, show
considerable originality, notably in dealing with three-dimensional figures. In particular, Piero gives descriptions of four of the polyhedra whose discovery Pappus of Alexandria (5th century AD) ascribes to Archimedes (c. 287212 BC). Pappus account merely lists the number of faces of each type. Piero shows what the solids actually look like, by describing how the faces are distributed round each corner of the solid. He is thus to be credited with having rediscovered the solids. Many of the problems in Pieros Trattato were printed, verbatim or with very minor changes, in Paciolis Summa de arithmetica (Venice, 1494). Pieros treatise De quinque corporibus regularibus is dedicated to Guidobaldo I, Duke of Urbino. This dedication must date from after Guidobaldos accession to the title, in 1482, so it is probable that the treatise was at least finished in the last decade of Pieros life. The single surviving manuscript is in Rome (Vatican, Bib. Apostolica, Cod. Urb. 273). The text is in Latin, but the work nonetheless has much in common with the vernacular Trattato dabaco , including many repeated problems (usually treated in a more detailed manner in the later work). The later treatise is original in being concerned only with geometry, however. Its first part deals with problems of plane figures, the second considers the five regular polyhedra individually, the third solves the problems involved in inscribing one regular polyhedron inside another (with numerous references to Elements , XV, a book formerly considered to be by Euclid). The fourth part of Pieros work deals with bodies that Piero calls irregular, though most of them (such as his Archimedean polyhedra, already discussed in the Trattato ) can be inscribed in a sphere, and almost all show considerable symmetry. Several of Pieros geometrical problems are original in requiring the construction of a sphere with volume equal to that of a given solid. Pieros treatise on the regular solids was printed, complete but in Italian translation, as the third part of Paciolis De divina proportione (Venice, 1509). Piero was undoubtedly a very able mathematician. His mathematical works are not only unusually orderly in their presentation but also show an unusual degree of originality (for their time) both in the extent to which they deal with geometrical problems and in the choice of the problems themselves. It is, however, difficult to establish any simple connection between Pieros mathematics and his paintings. His use of perspective seems to be broadly similar to that of most of his contemporaries, although he is exceptional in his adeptness at balancing composition in space with composition in the plane, and the famous stillness of his works may be due to his having made exact perspective calculations for an unusually large number of elements (thus, for example, making all heads appear exactly equal). Pieros strong sense of order and of symmetry certainly should be seen as links between his mathematics and his art, although they by no means provide complete characterizations of either.
Writings
G. Mancini, ed.: Libellus de quinque corporibus regularibus (Rome, 1916); also in G. Mancini: Lopera De corporibus regularibus di Pietro Franceschi detto della Francesca usurpata da Fra Luca Pacioli, Mem. Accad. Lincei, 15th ser., xiv, pp. 441580 G. Nicco Fasola, ed.: De prospectiva pingendi (Florence, 1942/ R Florence, 1984) G. Arrighi, ed.: Trattato dabaco (Pisa, 1970)
Bibliography
S. A. Jaywardene: The Trattato dabaco of Piero della Francesca, Cultural Aspects of the Italian Renaissance , ed. C. H. Clough (Manchester, 1976) M. D. Davis: Piero della Francescas Mathematical Treatises: The Trattato dabaco and Libellus de quinque corporibus regularibus (Ravenna, 1977) O. Calabrese, ed.: Piero teorico darte (Rome, 1985) R. Franci and L. Toti Rigatelli: Towards a History of Algebra from Leonardo of Pisa to Luca Pacioli, Janus , lxxii (1985), pp. 1782
J.V. Field
Bibliography
Early sources
Filarete [Antonio Averlino]: Trattato del architettura (MS.; early 1460s); ed. J. R. Spencer (New Haven, 1965), ii G. Santi: La vita e le gesta di Federico di Montefeltro, Duca dUrbino (MS.; c. 1482); ed. L. Michelini Tocci (Vatican City, 1985), ii, pp. 6734 L. Pacioli: Summa de arithmetica (Venice, 1494), fols 2 r , 68 v L. Pacioli: De divina proportione (Venice, 1509), fols 23 r , 33 r G. Vasari: Le vite di pi eccelenti [sic] architetti, pittori, et scultori (Florence, 1550); ed. L. Bellosi and A. Rossi (Turin, 1986), pp. 33743 G. Vasari: Vite (1550, rev. 2/1568); ed. G. Milanesi (187885 ), ii, pp. 487501
General
J. Crowe and G. Cavalcaselle: New History of Painting in Italy (London, 1864) E. Borsook: The Mural Painters of Tuscany from Cimabue to Andrea del Castagno (London, 1960, rev. Oxford, 2/1980) B. Berenson: Central and North Italian Schools (1968)
M. Aronberg Lavin: The Place of Narrative: Mural Decoration in Italian Churches, 4311600 (Chicago, 1990), pp. 16794 J. R. Banker : The Culture of San Sepolcro during the Youth of Piero della Francesca (Ann Arbor, MI, 2003)
Monographs
K. Clark: Piero della Francesca (London, 1951, rev. 2/1969) B. Berenson: Piero della Francesca or the Ineloquent in Art (London, 1954) R. Longhi: Piero della Francesca (1963), iii of Opere complete di Roberto Longhi (Florence, 1963)
G. Gilbert: Change in Piero della Francesca (Locust Valley, 1968) P. Hendy: Piero della Francesca and the Early Renaissance (London, 1968) P. de Vecchi: The Complete Paintings of Piero della Francesca (London, 1970/ R Harmondsworth, 1985)
E. Battisti: Piero della Francesca , 2 vols (Milan, 1971, rev. 2/1992) M. Salmi: La pittura di Piero della Francesca (Novara, 1979) B. Cole: Piero della Francesca: Tradition and Innovation in Renaissance Art (New York, 1991) J. Pope-Hennessy: The Piero della Francesca Trail (London, 1991) M. Aronberg Lavin: Piero della Francesca (London and New York, 1992) C. Bertelli: Piero della Francesca (London and New Haven, 1992) R. Lightbown: Piero della Francesca (New York, London and Paris, 1992) M. Calvesi : Piero della Francesca (Turin, 1998) C. Prete, ed.: Piero interpretato: Copie, giudizi e musealizzazione di Piero della Francesca (Ancona, 1998)
J. M. Wood, ed.: The Cambridge Companion to Piero della Francesca (Cambridge, 2002) J. V. Field : Piero della Francesca: A Mathematicians Art (New Haven, 2005) B. Roeck : Mrder, Maler und Mzene: Piero della Francesca Geisselung: eine kunsthistorische Kriminalgeschichte (Munich, 2006)
Nel raggio di Piero (exh. cat., ed. L. Berti; Sansepolcro, Mus. Civ., 1992) Piero e Urbino, Piero e le corti rinascimentali (exh. cat., ed. P. dal Poggetto; Urbino, Pal. Ducale, 1992)
Una scuola per Piero: Luce, colore e prospettiva nella formazione fiorentina di Piero della Francesca (exh. cat., ed. L. Bellosi; Florence, Uffizi, 19923 ) Il polittico agostiniano di Piero della Francesca (exh. cat., ed. A. di Lorenzo; Milan, Mus. Poldi-Pezzoli,
1996) I Della Rovere: Piero della Francesca, Raffaello, Tiziano (exh. cat., ed. P. Dal Poggetto; Senigallia, Palazzo del Duca; Urbino, Pal. Ducale; Pesaro, Pal. Ducale; Urbania, Museo Civico, 2004) Piero della Francesca e le corti italiane (exh. cat., eds C. Bertelli and A. Paolucci; Arezzo, Gal & Mus. Med. & Mod., 2007)
Specialist studies
Specific paintings
M. Aronberg Lavin: Piero della Francesca: The Flagellation (Chicago and London, 1972, rev. Chicago, 2/1990) M. Aronberg Lavin: Piero della Francescas Baptism of Christ (New Haven, 1981) P. Scapecchi: Enea Silvio Piccolomini, Piero della Francesca e gli affreschi di Arezzo, Prospettiva [Florence], 32 (1983), pp. 716 M. Aronberg Lavin and M. Laclotte: Piero della Francesca a Rimini: Laffresco nel Tempio Malatestiano (Bologna, 1984) C. Ginzburg: The Enigma of Piero: The Baptism, the Arezzo Cycle, the Flagellation (London, 1985); review by P. Black in Oxford A. J. , ix/2 (1986) J. Pope-Hennessy: Whose Flagellation ?, Apollo , cxxiv (1986), pp. 1625 J. R. Banker: Piero della Francescas S Agostino Altarpiece: Some New Documents, Burl. Mag. , cxxix (1987), pp. 64251 L. Bellosi: Giovanni di Piamonte e gli affreschi di Piero ad Arezzo, Prospettiva [Florence], 50 (1987), pp. 1535 J. Guillaud and M. Guillaud: Piero della Francesca, Poet of Form: The Frescoes of San Francesco in Arezzo (Paris and New York, 1988) M. G. Paolini, ed.: Ricerche su Piero (Siena, 1989) [essays on the Resurrection , St Louis of Toulouse and Perugia] Progetto per Piero della Francesca: Indagini diagnostico-conoscitive per la conservazione della Leggenda della Vera Croce e della Madonna del parto (Florence, 1989) G. Centauro: Dipinti murali di Piero della Francesca. La basilica di S Francesco ad Arezzo: Indagini su sette secoli (Milan, 1990) F. Lollini: Ancora la Flagellazione: Addenda di bibliografia (e di metodo), Boll. A. , 67 (1991), pp. 14950
F. Lollini: Una possibile connotazione antiebraica della Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca, Boll. A. , 65 (1991), pp. 128 E. F. Londei: La scena della Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca: La sua identificazione con un luogo di Urbino del quattrocento, Boll. A. , 65 (1991), pp. 2966 A. S. Tessari: La Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca: Ovvero linstaurazione del Regno di Cristo, A. Crist. , 745 (1991), pp. 27786 M. Calvesi: La Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca: Identikit di un enigma, A. & Dossier , 70 (1992), pp. 227 Piero della Francesca: Il polittico di Sant Antonio (exh. cat., ed. V. Garibaldi; Perugia, Rocca Paolina, 1993) M. A. Lavin: Piero della Francesca: San Francesco, Arezzo (New York, 1994) S. Nessi: Il SantAntonio di Padova di Piero della Francesca nel polittico di Perugia, Santo, xxxiv/1 (Jan April 1994), pp. 958
J. R. Banker: The Altarpiece of the Confraternity of Santa Maria della Misericordia in Borgo Sansepolcro, Piero della Francesca and his Legacy (Washington, DC, 1995), pp. 2135 B. Diemling: The Meeting of the Queen of Sheba with Solomon : Crusade Propaganda in the Fresco Cycle of Piero della Francesca in Arezzo, Bruckmanns Pantheon , liii (1995), pp. 1828 M. Michael: Piero della Francesca: The Arezzo Frescoes (London, 1996) D. Arasse: Piero della Francesca: La Legende dArezzo: Restoration of Mural Paintings at Basilica di San Francesco, Italy, LOeil , 487 (1997), pp. 4457 H. Damisch : Piera della Francescas Madonna del Parto: Die Konstruktion einer Kinderheitserinnerung, Aufklrung anstelle von Andacht: Kulturwissenschaftliche Dimensionen bildender Kunst , ed. K. Herding (Frankfurt am Main, 1997), pp. 12032 L. Simi : La Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca: Un bilancio (provvisorio) e una proposta, Guardate con i vostri occhi : Saggi di storia dellarte nelle Marche, ed. A. Montironi (Ascoli Piceno, 2002), pp. 11143 Y. Bonnefoy : La strategia dellenigma: Piera della Francesca e La Flagellazione di Cristo, La civilt delle immagini: Pittori e poeti dItalia, ed. Y. Bonnefoy (Rome, 2005), pp. 1542 P. Longo : Lo spazio nella Flagellazione di Piero della Francesca, Prospettiva e geometria dello spazio (La Spezia, 2005), pp. 6981 H. Wenzel : Piero della Francesca: die Madonna mite der Perle, Mglichkeitsrume: zur Performativitt von sensorischer Wahrnehmung , ed. C. Lechtermann (Berlin, 2007), pp. 22953 A. Dillon Bussi : Il Dittico degli incontri e altre opere urbinate di Piero della Francesca, Paragone, n. s. 3, lix/80 (2008), pp. 2039
Other
M. Salmi: Perch Piero della Francesca?, Commentari, 27 (1976), pp. 1216 J. Beck: Una data per Piero della Francesca, Prospettiva [Florence], 25 (1978), p. 53 R. Cocke: Piero della Francesca and the Development of Italian Landscape Painting, Burl. Mag. , cxxii (1980), pp. 62731 G. Agosti and V. Farinella: Calore del marmo. Pratica e tipologia della deduzioni iconografiche. Un artista: Piero della Francesca, per esempio, Memoria dell antico nell arte italiana, ed. S. Settis, i (Turin, 1984), pp. 42740 F. Dabell: Antonio dAnghiari e gli inizi di Piero della Francesca, Paragone, 417 (1984), pp. 7194
P. Scapecchi: Tu celebras burgi iam cuncta per oppida nomen: Appunti per Piero della Francesca, A. Crist. (1984), pp. 20921 J. Triolo: Aggiunte bibliografiche a Piero della Francesca, 197083 , Piero teorico dellarte , ed. O. Calabrese (Rome, 1985), pp. 28799 J. Pope-Hennessy: The Mystery of a Master, New Repub. , 3715 (1986), pp. 3841 A. Turchini: Limperatore, il santo e il cavaliere: Note su Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta e Piero della Francesca, A. Crist. , 714 (1986), pp. 16580 F. Polcri: A proposito di Piero della Francesca: Nuove fonti archivistiche a Sansepolcro, Prop. & Ric., 21 (1988), pp. 3954 J. R. Banker: Un documento inedito del 1432 sullattivit di Piero della Francesca per la chiesa di San Francesco in Borgo S Sepolcro, Rivista darte [prev. pubd as Misc. A.], 4th ser., vi (1990), pp. 2457
F. Polcri: Due ritrovamenti darchivio a Sansepolcro: Un inedito sul polittico degli Agostiniani di Piero della Francesca (Sansepolcro, 1990) F. Polcri: Ritrovamenti pierfrancescani nellarchivio giudiziario di Sansepolcro, Atti Mem. Accad. Petrarca Lett., A. & Sci. , n. s., i (1990), pp. 20317
F. Dabell: New Documents for the History and Patronage of the Compagnia della SS Trinit in Arezzo, A. Crist. , 747 (1991), pp. 41217 D. Franklin: An Unrecorded Commission for Piero della Francesca in Arezzo, Burl. Mag. , cxxxiii (1991), pp. 1934 L. B. Kanter: Luca Signorelli, Piero della Francesca, and Pietro Perugino, Stud. Stor. A. , i (1991), pp. 95111 J. R. Banker: Piero della Francesca, il fratello Don Francesco di Benedetto e Francesco dal Borgo, Prospettiva , 68 (1992), pp. 546 C. B. Cappel: On la testa proportionalmente degradata: Luca Signorelli, Leonardo, and Piero della Francescas De prospectiva pingendi , Florentine Drawing at the Time of Lorenzo the Magnificent: Papers from a Colloquium held at the Villa Spelman: Florence, 1992 , pp. 1743 P. G. Pasini: Piero e i Malatesti: Lattivit di Piero della Francesca per le corti romagnole (Milan, 1992)
J. R. Banker: Piero della Francesca as Assistant to Antonio dAnghiari in the 1430s: Some Unpublished Documents, Burl. Mag. , cxxxv (1993), pp. 1621 C. E. Gilbert: Piero della Francesca et Giorgione: Problmes dinterprtation (Paris, 1994) M. Aronberg Lavin, ed.: Piero della Francesca and his Legacy (Washington, DC, 1995) C. Cieri Via and M. Emiliani Dalai, eds: Piero 500 anni (Venice, 1995) M. Kemp: In the Light of Dante: Meditations on Natural and Divine Light in Piero della Francesca, Raphael and Michelangelo, Ars naturam adiuvans: Festschrift fr Matthias Winner, ed. V. V. Flemming and S. Schutze (Mainz, 1996), pp. 16077 R. Bellucci and C. Frosinini: Esempi di studio dell underdrawing: Il caso di Piero della Francesca, Oltre il visibile: Indagini riflettografiche , ed. D. Bertani (Milan, 2001), pp. 14566 C. Bertelli : Il ritratto nellopera di Piero della Francesca, Le metamorfosi del ritratto , ed. R. Zorzi (Florence, 2002), pp. 6372 M. Aronberg Lavin : Piero della Francesca and Narrative Encapsulation: e.g., the Cock on the Column, Artibus & Hist., xxv/49 (2004), pp. 918 C. Bertelli : Mantegna e Piero della Francesca a Ferrara, Nel segno di Andrea Mantegna: Arte e cultura a Mantova in et rinascimentale (Modena, 2006), pp. 627 C. S. Wood : Piero della Francesca, Liminologist, Bilder, Rume, Betrachter: Festschrift fr Wolfgang Kemp zum 60. Geburtstag , ed. S. Bogen (Berlin, 2006), pp. 25269 A. Antoniutti : Piero della Francesca a Roma, la committenza di Pio II e del cardinale Guillaume dEstouteville, Il 400 a Roma: La rinascita delle arti da Donatello a Perugino , ed. M. G. Bernardini (Milan, 2008), pp. 1617
Frank Dabell