Lecture 6: Giotto and the Arena Chapel—Part I
parents, and continues back toward the entrance door. It then moves to the
top tier on the left-hand side of the chapel and continues back to the altar
wall. The last narrative scene is Mary’s Wedding Procession. There are 12
scenes in all.
At the top, the arched altar wall depicts God sending the Angel Gabriel to
tell Mary of the divine child she is to bear; the Annunciation À anks the arch,
with the Angel Gabriel on the left and Mary on the right. The middle tier
of the right-hand wall begins at the altar end with the Nativity, the birth of
Jesus, and moves through the stories of his early childhood. Then, jumping
across to the north side, the narrative continues, mostly with stories of Jesus’
ministry. The bottom tier on the south wall continues with the last events
of Jesus’ life, from the Last Supper to the Mocking of Christ, and on the
opposite wall, with the Procession to Calvary and the Cruci¿ xion, on through
the events after Jesus’ death, ending at the
altar wall once more. The only wall that
we have not mentioned or seen so far is
the interior of the entrance wall, where
Giotto painted the Last Judgment.
For the remainder of this lecture and the
next, we will look more closely at some
of the most signi¿ cant of these scenes in
narrative order. The ¿ rst reproduction
contains the Triumphal Arch with the
Altar, including the Annunciation, Pact of Judas, and Visitation. On the altar,
we see Giovanni Pisano’s Madonna and Child (c. 1305). This sculpture has a
French À air, suggesting that Giovanni had seen French Gothic sculpture and
highlighting the difference between Giovanni and his father, Nicola, who
showed strong Classical tendencies.
Note the following sources for the life of the Virgin and the life of Christ.
Keep in mind that artists had other sources besides the Old and New
Testaments to consult when elaborating their painted narratives. For the
legends of the Virgin Mary and her parents, see the Apocryphal Gospel of St.
James the Less and the Gospel of the Pseudo-Matthew. The famous Golden
Because the painting
of an area of wet
plaster must stop when
the plaster dries, the
medium requires speed
and con¿ dence.