The Early Renaissance


   

 


Luca Signorelli
 
 
 

 

 

Luca Signorelli
 

(b Cortona, c. 1450; d between Oct and Dec 1523).

Italian painter and draughtsman. Overcoming the handicap of lifelong residence in the provincial town of Cortona, in the 1480s he obtained early recognition as a leading artist in central Italy from fellow artists and major patrons, including Pope Sixtus IV and Lorenzo de’ Medici. Yet rapid evolution of taste, dominated by a sense of constant progress in truth to nature, led to his eclipse, beginning in the 1490s, together with his contemporaries Botticelli and Perugino, in favour of younger masters such as Filippino Lippi and Leonardo da Vinci. He was still respected for his skill in anatomical drawing and the expressive and dramatic effects for which he used it; this most notably produced Michelangelo’s homage to Signorelli (Vasari reported that Michelangelo praised his frescoes at Orvieto highly and borrowed certain motifs from them for his Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel, Rome).

 

     


Self-portrait with Vitelozzo Vitelli

1500-03
Panel
Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, Orvieto
 

 
 


The Trinity, the Virgin and Two Saints

1510
Tempera on wood, 272 x 180 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
 

 
 


Virgin and Child
1495

 

 
6
The Scourging of Christ

c. 1480
Tempera on roundheaded panel, 84 x 57 cm
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan
 
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L'Adoration des Mages
 
 
 


La Naissance de saint Jean Baptiste
 

   
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