A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

The Renaissance flourished in many Italian cities besides Florence, among them


Rome, Urbino, Mantua, Venice, Milan, and Perugia. A Perugian noblewoman,


Atalanta Baglioni, for example, commissioned the artist Raphael (1483–1520) to paint


an altarpiece for her private chapel to commemorate the death of her son, Grifonetto.


In his Entombment of Christ (see Plate 8.5 on p. 311), Raphael joined religious piety


to family feeling and admiration for classical themes and representations. The piety


and family feeling are obvious: the altar was meant to serve as the backdrop for


commemorative masses on behalf of Grifonetto’s soul and for Atalanta herself when


she died. Viewers would have associated her with the Virgin, mother of the crucified


Christ, who appears in the painting fainting with grief. Raphael’s reliance on classical


precedents is perhaps less evident here than in, say, Piero’s painting of Venus. But


compare the limp figure of Christ and his straining corpse-bearers with the group


carrying the lifeless Meleager in Plate 1.4 on p. 15. It is likely that this ancient


sarcophagus, which was well known and admired in Raphael’s day, inspired his


modeling of Christ and his bearers.

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