- 54
Gherardo di Jacopo di Neri, called Gherardo Starnina
Description
- Gherardo di Jacopo di Neri, called Gherardo Starnina
- a franciscan saint miraculously saving a woman from drowning
- tempera on gold-ground, poplar panel
Provenance
Literature
C. Syre, Studien zum "Maestro del Bambino Vispo" und Starnina, Bonn 1979, p. 124-125, as by a follower of Starnina;
M. Laclotte, 'Autour de Starnina de Lucques à Valence', in D. Parenti and A Tartuferi (eds.), Nuovi Studi sulla pittura tardogotica. Intorno a Lorenzo Monaco, Florence 2007, p. 66-75.
Condition
"This lot is offered for sale subject to Replica Shoes 's Conditions of Business, which are available on request and printed in Replica Shoes 's sale catalogues. The independent reports contained in this document are provided for prospective bidders' information only and without warranty by Replica Shoes 's or the Seller."
Catalogue Note
Vasari might be correct in considering Starnina to be one of the precursors of the Florentine renaissance, but other information that he gave about the artist has turned out to be unreliable. Starnina was enrolled in the Compagnia di San Luca in Florence in 1387, and is recorded in the next decade in Spain: in Toledo in 1395, and in Valencia between 1398 and 1401. Back in Florence, he decorated the chapel of S. Gerolamo in the Carmine, and of his frescoes in Santo Stefano in Empoli where he is recorded in 1409, a detached fragment survives. Various attempts have been made to reconstruct his oeuvre, and he is now generally recognised as the author of a group of works, including this one, who was known as the Master of the Bambino Vispo after his recurrent depiction of an unusually lively Infant Christ.
Volpe published this picture as the Master of the Bambino Vispo before the identification as Starnina was made. He notes the Florentine character of the work, likening it to the work of Rossello di Jacopo Franchi and Giovanni Toscani.
We are most grateful to Dr Gaudenz Freuler for endorsing the attribution and for pointing out that the predella panel has been associated for its similar size and style with two other predellas by Starnina depicting The Stigmatization of Saint Francis and Saint Martin cutting his cloak for a beggar, both listed as in a private collects
ion.1 According to Laclotte (see Literature) a fourth predella from the series showing Saint Michael fighting the Dragon was stolen from the Musée d'art et d'histoire, Langres. A photomontage of the proposed recontsruction of the predellas is illustrated by Laclotte (op. cit., p. 69, fig. 5). The main portion of the dismembered altarpiece is yet to be identified.
Volpe wondered if the Franciscan Saint might be S. Giovanni Gualberto (c.985-1073), but without giving a reason; no such subject is recorded in the life of this most Tuscan of saints, who was the son of a Florentine nobleman, and who entered the Benedictine Order and later founded the monastery at Vallombrosa in the Casentino, which spawned in his lifet.mes
a further eleven Vallombrosan houses.
1. See Syre under Literature, reproduced figs. 153 and 154.