Ark of Sant'Apollonio

Last updated
The Ark of Sant'Apollonio
Arca sant'apollonio duomo nuovo brescia.jpg
Artist Gasparo Cairano
Year1508
MediumMarble
Movement Renaissance
Dimensions70 cm× 270 cm× 360 cm(28 in× 110 in× 140 in)
Location Duomo Nuovo, Brescia

The Ark of Sant'Apollonio is a funerary monument in marble by Gasparo Cairano. Dated between 1508 and 1510, it is located in the third chapel on the right of the southern nave of the New Cathedral, Brescia.

Contents

History

On 5 January 1503, the discovery of the relics of Sant'Apollonio, the fourth bishop of Brescia, in the Basilica of San Pietro de Dom was officially announced. [1] The discovery had likely been made in September 1502 with the finding of documentation of works in his named chapel. [2] The same day, the General Council of the city decided unanimously to provide a worthy emplacement for the remains of the saint, in agreement with diocesan authorities and the cathedral. In June, another resolution of the General Council was made, bidding the College of Notaries to finance the new ark. [3] However, the funds were not immediately committed, most likely because the notaries had had trouble to raise the funds. [4]

Another order from the Council dates to 1506, ordering the College of Notaries to fulfil the work. [5] Finally, in 1508, three people were appointed by the council to preside over the expansion of the chapel of Sant'Apollonio so that it could encompass the marble reliquary ark (archa marmorea et miro artificio fabricata de pecuniis collegii notariorum Brixie). [6] [7] The works are thereby documented from December 1509 through November 1510, with fees for interventions such as the lowering of the floor and the remaking of the walls and the arch, the last by a master Benedictus lapicida. [8] The expenses were considerable, nearly 300 lire planette (the Brescian currency of the time). [9]

The transfer of the relics, officiated by Bishop Mattia Ugoni and attended by notable city authorities as well as papal representatives, took place in July 1510, [10] by which time the ark would have been completed. The execution of the work, therefore, can be placed between 1508 and 1510. [11]

The sculptural complex was transferred to the Old Cathedral in 1604, when the early Christian basilica was beginning to be demolished, to be replaced by the Duomo Nuovo. [12] At this time, relics of Philastrius, another bishop of Brescia from the fourth century, were also placed in the ark. Finally, in 1674, the ark was moved to the Duomo Nuovo, where it is found to this day, in the last of the chapels on the right side of the southern nave, said nave being dedicated to the saints Apollonius and Philastrius. [12] A new altar was built by Carlo Carra and collaborators, comprising two lateral shelves and a central dedicatory inscription, all on a high base. [13] The original supports, possibly columns or pillars, were removed. [12]

Description

The ark comprises three stages: a base, a central body, and the cymatium. The base is made up of two distinct bands of equal width, the first smooth in gray stone and the second in white marble with a decoration of festoons. The central body is the most elaborate from an artistic point of view and has five historiated panels, three on the front and two on the sides, depicting some stories of the life of Saint Apollonius. From the left side panel, proceeding to the right, there are the Imposition of the priestly robes to Saints Faustino and Giovita, the Preaching to the people, the proof of the Eucharist, the baptism of Calocero and the death of Saint Apollonius. The painted panels are inserted in an architectural order of Corinthian pilasters with candelabra, which hold up a thick entablature with an elaborate frieze.

The sculptural complex is topped by the cymatium, consisting of a pedestal bearing a dedicatory inscription, on which is inset a statue of Sant'Apollonio with a crosier in gilded bronze. The canopy is crowned with a lunette bearing a Madonna with Child and angels, in turn completed by a torch from which emanate false gold bronze flames. Two small pedestals flank the canopy, connecting to the central body via stone elements with characteristic wave profiles, above which are statuettes of San Faustino on the left and San Giovita on the right.

Stylistic assessment and attribution

From the seventeenth century onwards, the ark was considered a fine objet d'art in Brescia, especially in catalogues of Brescian saints, that is to say, from the time of its emplacement in the Old Cathedral. Bernardino Faino, for instance, praised the beautiful depiction of the saint (istorie picole del istesso Santo, bellissime), adding that its author is unknown, being from antiquity. [14] Francesco Paglia's Giardino della Pittura (written between 1675 and 1713), in the chapter on the old Cathedral, admired the carved ark with beautiful white marble figurines, that is, the ark of Sant'Apollonio. [15]

The ark in front view 453BresciaDuomoInside.jpg
The ark in front view

In 1822, the work was selected from among the historical monuments of Brescia to be included in the Le tombe e i monumenti illustri d'Italia, and given a full page engraving. Paolo Brognoli, in his 1826 guide to Brescia, was the first to conduct a critical analysis of the sculptures in the ark. Following researches in the municipal archives, he was able to reconstruct partially the circumstances of the monument's commission, though he was unable to find the contract with the sculptor who produced the ark. [16] This was of particular interest to him, he said, because he had identified a monument by the same artist, dated to 1494, [17] that was dedicated to Luigi Caprioli. [18] (This was the Caprioli Adoration, and marks the first time that an artistic connection was made with the ark, not based on literary or archival evidence, but purely on stylistic considerations.) [19] In 1939, Antonio Morassi proposed an attribution of the ark to Maffeo Olivieri, which was reasserted by subsequent texts. [12]

Two studies by Vito Zani in 2001 [20] and 2003 [21] proposed the reassignment of the work to Gasparo Cairano, based on stylistic comparisons and historical context. Zani was able to locate identical characteristics between the summit statue of the ark of Sant'Apollonio and the keystone of the portico of the Palazzo della Loggia in Brescia, the latter documented with payments to Cairano in 1497. [22] [23] Zani noted the similarity in the execution of the faces, softening their features but providing the same expressive severity. [12] The same face, austere and calm, can also be found in San Pietro on the portal of the cathedral of Salò, which slightly predated the ark. [24] The ark's two statues of Saints Faustino and Giovita, on the contrary, represent an extreme tribute to the Angels of Tamagnino for the Church of Santa Maria dei Miracoli, against which Cairano, almost twenty years earlier, had opposed his qualitatively inferior Apostles. These references however had been updated, with the heads and hair reshaped, according to the popular model of the contemporary Apostles at the Church of San Pietro in Oliveto. [12] Furthermore, there were obvious technical and expressive similarities between the ark's San Faustino and the left-hand Caesar on the south side of the Loggia carried out between 1503 and 1508. The face of San Faustino has unfinished parts left close to smoothing, worked directly with a flat chisel, proving the virtuosity of the master in sculpting heads. [24]

Other points of similarity occur between the Madonna's face on the ark's cymatium and the female face of Justice on the Loggia's portico, [25] which Cairano then reiterates in the Pala Kress. [24] The middle frieze too supports the attribution to Cairano, its elaborate workmanship reminiscent of the Mausoleum of Martinengo and the altar of San Girolamo, both of which had very similarly executed friezes. The attention paid to the bold perspectives behind the foreground characters also has a precedent in Cairano's career, namely the Caprioli Adoration. [25]

The execution of the ark can be seen in the context of the rivalry between the Sanmicheli and Cairano, whose promotion of a classic style had supplanted the refined decorations of the Sanmicheli in public tastes. [26] For instance, the 1505 Ark of San Tiziano installed in the Church of the Saints Cosma and Damiano by the Sanmicheli as an attempt to relaunch their studio, is largely supplanted by the monumentality and refinement of the figurative parts of the ark of Sant'Apollonio. Cairano thereby established his artistic domination with a production of the highest quality. [23] [27]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Salò</span> Comune in Lombardy, Italy

Salò is a town and comune in the Province of Brescia in the region of Lombardy on the banks of Lake Garda, on which it has the longest promenade. The city was the seat of government of the Italian Social Republic from 1943 to 1945, a state often referred to as the "Salò Republic".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Santa Maria dei Miracoli, Brescia</span>

The church of Santa Maria dei Miracoli is located on Corso Martiri della Libertà in Brescia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gasparo Cairano</span> Italian sculptor (1489–1517)

Gasparo Cairano, also known as Gasparo da Cairano, de Cayrano, da Milano, Coirano, and other variations, was an Italian Renaissance sculptor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antonio Mangiacavalli</span> Italian sculptor

Antonio Mangiacavalli was an Italian sculptor of the Renaissance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Santa Maria Annunziata, Salò</span> Church in Italy

Santa Maria Annunziata is the main religious building (duomo) of the town of Salò, Italy.

Antonio della Porta, better known as Tamagnino was an Italian sculptor of the Renaissance.

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Brescia in the Lombardy region of Italy.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bernardino delle Croci</span> Italian goldsmith and sculptor

Bernardino delle Croci was an Italian goldsmith and sculptor of the Brescian Renaissance. He was the founder of the Delle Croci family of important goldsmiths and sculptors, known for their specialism in processional crosses, reliquaries and altars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palazzo della Loggia (Brescia)</span> Historical building in Brescia, Italy

Palazzo della Loggia is a Renaissance palace situated in the eponymous piazza in Brescia.

The Caprioli Adoration is an Italian Renaissance sculpture, a relief in marble by Gasparo Cairano, dated between 1495 and 1500, placed in the Church of St Francis of Assisi in Brescia as a frontal for the high altar.

<i>Tomb of Gaspare Brunelli</i>

The Tomb of Gaspare Brunelli is a funerary monument in partially painted and gilded marble by Gasparo Cairano, dating to 1500, and situated in the Sacred Heart chapel of the Church of St Francis of Assisi, Brescia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Caprioli Chapel</span>

The Caprioli Chapel is the second chapel on the left side of the nave of the Church of San Giorgio in Brescia.

<i>Luzzago Altarpiece</i> 1542 painting by Moretto da Brescia

The Luzzago Altarpiece is a 1542 oil on canvas painting by Moretto da Brescia, now in the Pinacoteca Tosio Martinengo in Brescia. It was recorded in San Giuseppe church in Brescia in 1630 and moved to its present home in 1868. In the lower register Michael the Archangel points the kneeling donor to the Madonna and Child above, whilst Francis of Assisi stands to the right with a cross.

<i>St Margaret of Antioch with Two Saints</i> 1530 painting by Moretto da Brescia

St Margaret of Antioch with Two Saints is a 1530 oil on panel painting by Moretto da Brescia on display on the side-altar of St Jerome in the church of San Francesco in Brescia. To the left of Margaret of Antioch is shown Saint Jerome, whilst to the right is Francis of Assisi.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maffeo Olivieri</span> Italian sculptor

Maffeo Olivieri was an Italian sculptor and wood carver. Often associated with his younger brother Andrea, he was active in Lombardy, Venice and Trentino. He was known for his bronze, wood and marble creations, and considered the premier sculptor in early sixteenth century Brescia.

<i>Ark of San Tiziano</i> Marble tomb by the Sanmicheli studio

The Ark of San Tiziano is a marble tomb attributed to the Sanmicheli studio. Finished in 1505, it is located in the Church of the Saints Cosma and Damiano in Brescia, in the chapel dedicated to these saints.

<i>Altar of San Girolamo</i> Sculptural complex in Brescia, Italy

The Altar of San Girolamo is a sculptural complex in marble, around 780×450×80cm in dimension, designed and constructed by Gasparo Cairano and Antonio Medaglia, and situated within the Church of St Francis of Assisi in Brescia, Italy. Dated between 1506–1510, it is located in the first chapel on the right side of the nave.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palazzo Averoldi</span> Building in Brescia, Italy

Palazzo Averoldi is a historic building in Brescia located on Via Moretto at number 12. It was built starting in the 16th century in the middle of the southern historic center, in what was once the so-called Quadra di San Giovanni.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Renaissance art in Bergamo and Brescia</span> Aspects of Renaissance art and culture in Bergamo and Brescia

The Bergamasque and Brescian Renaissance is one of the main variations of Renaissance art in Italy. The importance of the two cities on the art scene only expanded from the 16th century onward, when foreign and local artists gave rise to an original synthesis of Lombard and Venetian modes, due in part to the two cities' particular geographical position: the last outpost of the Serenissima on the mainland for Bergamo and a disputed territory between Milan and Venice for Brescia.

<i>Martinengo Mausoleum</i> Mausoleum in Brescia, Italy

The Martinengo mausoleum is a funerary monument made through the use of various marbles and bronze by Gasparo Cairano, Bernardino delle Croci and probably the Sanmicheli workshop, dated between 1503 and 1518 and preserved in the museum of Santa Giulia in Brescia, in the nuns' choir.

References

  1. Archivio di Stato di Brescia, Archivio Storico Civico, provisions, 1528, c. 67r.
  2. Liber Buletarum Fabrice Ecclesie Maioris. 1486-1571 (BQ, Ms. F. VII. 24), cc. 33r-v.
  3. Archivio di Stato di Brescia, Archivio Storico Civico, provisions, 519, c. 16r.
  4. Zani 2010, pp. 130–132.
  5. Archivio di Stato di Brescia, Archivio Storico Civico, provisions, cart. 520, cc. 80v-81r.
  6. Archivio di Stato di Brescia, Archivio Storico Civico, provisions, cart. 521, c. 128r.
  7. Zani 2010, p. 130.
  8. Liber Buletarum Fabrice Ecclesie Maioris. 1486-1571 [BQ, Ms. F. VII. 24], cc. 51r, 52r-52v.
  9. Ongaro 2016, p. 15.
  10. Archivio di Stato di Brescia, Archivio Storico Civico, Provvisioni, 1528, c. 171r.
  11. Zani 2010, pp. 130–131.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Zani 2010, p. 131.
  13. Partitario per le oblazioni e spese per S.M. del Duomo e altre chiese per le custodie notturne. Anno 1671-1700, archived in ASB, Archivio Storico Civico, cart. 954, cc. 61-64.
  14. Faino 1669, pp. 18–19.
  15. Paglia 1713, p. 75.
  16. Brognoli 1826, pp. 43, 236–239.
  17. Brognoli 1826, p. 43.
  18. Brognoli 1826, pp. 238–239, note 46.
  19. Agosti 1995, pp. 91–105.
  20. Zani 2001, p. 18.
  21. Zani 2003, pp. 8–15.
  22. Zamboni 1778, pp. 50–51, 53.
  23. 1 2 Zani 2011, p. 72.
  24. 1 2 3 Zani 2012.
  25. 1 2 Zani 2010, p. 132.
  26. Zani 2010, p. 96.
  27. Zani 2010, p. 108.

Bibliography

See also