the folly of pleasure and the inevitability of death. On the far right (FIG.
19-20,right), ladies and gentlemen ignore dreadful realities, occupying
themselves in an orange grove with music and amusements while all
around them angels and demons struggle for the souls of the corpses
heaped in the foreground.
In addition to these direct and straightforward scenes, the mural
contains details that convey more subtle messages. For example, the
painter depicted those who appear unprepared for death—and thus
unlikely to achieve salvation—as wealthy and reveling in luxury. Given
that the Dominicans—an order committed to a life of poverty—par-
ticipated in the design for this fresco program, the imagery surely was a
warning against greed and lust. Although Triumph of Death is a compi-
lation of disparate scenes, the artist rendered each scene with natural-
ism and emotive power. It is an irony of history that as Western hu-
manity drew both itself and the world into ever sharper visual focus, it
perceived ever more clearly that corporeal things were perishable.
DOGE’S PALACE, VENICEOne of the wealthiest cities of
late medieval Italy—and of Europe—was Venice, renowned for its
streets of water. Situated on a lagoon on the northeastern coast of
Italy, Venice was secure from land attack and could rely on a power-
ful navy for protection against invasion from the sea. Internally,
Venice was a tight corporation of ruling families who, for centuries,
provided stable rule and fostered economic growth. The Venetian
republic’s seat of government was the Doge’s (Duke’s) Palace (FIG.
19-21). Begun around 1340–1345 and significantly remodeled
The 14th Century 515
19-20Francesco Trainior Buonamico Buffalmacco,two details ofTriumph of Death,1330s. Full fresco, 18 6 49 2 . Camposanto, Pisa.
Befitting its location on a wall in Pisa’s Camposanto, the enclosed burial ground adjacent to the city’s cathedral, this fresco captures the horrors of
death and forces viewers to confront their mortality.
19-21Doge’s Palace, Venice, Italy, begun ca. 1340–1345; expanded and remodeled, 1424–1438.
The delicate patterning in cream- and rose-colored marbles, the pointed and ogee arches, and the quatrefoil medallions
of the Doge’s Palace constitute a distinctive Venetian variation of northern Gothic architecture.
1 ft.
1 ft.