Bartolomeo Bulgarini (c. 1300-1310 – 1378), also known as Bulgarino or Bologhini,[1] was an Italian painter of the Trecento period in Siena both before and after the Black Death.[2]
Bartolomeo Bulgarini | |
---|---|
Born | c. 1300-1310 |
Died | 1378 | (aged 67–78)
Nationality | Italian |
Occupation | Painter |
Bulgarini's name came into prominence in January 2021, when Portrait of a Young Man holding a Roundel by Botticelli was sold at Sotheby's for a record 80 million dollars (over 92 million after fees and commission). The roundel has an inset original painting of a bearded man (probably a saint), attributed to Bulgarini.
Early life
editBulgarini was born into a noble family, several of whose members had served in the Council of Nine, Siena’s central governing body.[3] He is firmly in the Sienese school of painting, working in an Italo-Byzantine style on a gold ground. With his contemporaries, Simone Martini, Pietro Lorenzetti and Ambrogio Lorenzetti and others he is part of the generation following Duccio. He was recognised in his lifetime as one of the most talented Sienese painters of the mid-14th century and is the only one of his generation to be mentioned by Giorgio Vasari. It is likely that his family connections afforded him special opportunities for Sienese patronage, which he enjoyed from the very beginning of his career. Unlike many of his contemporaries he does not seem to have been under any pressure to seek employment outside the city. [3]
History
editBulgarini’s oeuvre has seen much controversy in its reconstructions, with works formerly attributed to Ugolino Lorenzetti, a composite name constructed in 1917 by Bernard Berenson, referencing the stylistic similarities to Ugolino Di Niero and Pietro Lorenzetti,[2] which he attached to a small body of nine paintings believed to all be by the same unknown Sienese artist. The paintings were grouped on a similar visual fluency, style and formula demonstrating a distinctly “Ugolini-esque” aesthetic.[4] However, of those nine paintings six were later attributed to "The master of the Ovile Madonna" by Ernst Dewald on the grounds of a perceived fundamental stylistic difference he claimed separated the paintings.[4] It wasn’t until Millard Meiss made the argument that the works attributed to both "The master of the Ovile Madonna" and "Ugolino Lorenzetti" might actually be by the same artist, Bulgarini.[4] San Pietro a Ovile was the parish church in the district where Bulgarini and his wife lived for most of their married life. Much of the difficulty in constructing his oeuvre is due to the lack of documentation needed to establish the painter's authorship and timeline of his work. The only known autographed work by Bulgarini is the St. Victor altarpiece in Siena Cathedral.[3] It was not until much later when several documents were found and the St Victor Altarpiece was reconstructed that we are able to have a clearer picture of his artistic career.[3] Bulgarini was almost exclusively a panel painter, which is rare among 14th century Sienese painters. He may have completed manuscripts or frescoes that remain unattributed or were painted over, but no such works have yet been discovered.
The St. Victor Altarpiece
editThis altarpiece (1348–1350),[5] found in the Siena Cathedral, was one of four altarpieces commissioned by the Commune, that depict the four patrons saints of the city. The other three altarpieces: St Ansanus by Simone Martini, St Crescentious by Ambrogio Lorenzetti and St Savinus by Pietro Lorenzetti; were identified earlier because the panels were signed and dated, and because of 15th century inventories from the cathedral.[6] However, none of these sources were consistent in mentioning the St Victor Altarpiece. It wasn’t until the late 16th century that previously lost inventories, made by Guigurta Tommasi, named Bulgarini as the painter of the St Victor altarpiece.[6]
Career
editThe earliest mention of Bulgarini is in 1338 for a payment made for painting the cover of the Biccherna, the book containing the financial transactions for the Commune starting in the thirteenth century until the fifteenth century. He entered the workshop of Pietro Lorenzetti as an apprentice or assistant. In 1341 and 1342 he was commissioned for two more covers for consecutive seasons.[3] His career, starting roughly in the 1330s, lasted into the 1370s. The loss of many of the older master painters through the Black Death left him as one of the most recognized painters in the city.[2] The earliest of his surviving works is the triptych with Saints Ansanus and Galganus painted circa 1339 for the Palazzo Pubblico. His last documented work supposedly signed and dated 1373, which is now lost, was a panel painting for the hospital of Santa Maria Della Scala in Siena[1] although he was active up until his death in 1378.
The Assumption of the Virgin and Doubting Thomas Altarpiece
editThe Assumption of the Virgin with Doubting Thomas (early 1360s)[3] is a large panel painted by Bulgarini. It was part of an altarpiece for the chapel which housed a group of important relics acquired by the Santa Maria della Scala Hospital from Constantinople, which included the Virgin’s belt or girdle that she cast down to Thomas[7] as tangible proof of her physical ascent to heaven. The importance of the relics is reflected in the composition of the panel painted by Bulgarini. Bulgarini’s somewhat unusual portrayal of Thomas with his back to the viewer differs from other iconography of the period, perhaps representing the position of the parishioners and Sienese officiants in worship of the virgin and the recently acquired relics in the newly constructed chapel.[7]
Works
editWorks attributed to Bulgarini are found at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Art Museum in Boston; the Fogg Art Museum in Cambridge; the Städel Art Museum in Frankfurt (Blinding of St Victor); and the Wallraf Richartz Art Museum in Cologne (Enthroned Madonna and Child).
References
edit- ^ a b Miklós Boskovits; Serena Padovani (1990). Early Italian painting: 1290-1470. Sotheby's Publications. ISBN 978-0-85667-381-8. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ a b c Dobrynin, Laura (2006). "Bulgarini, Saint Francis, and the Beginning of a Tradition". MA Thesis. OhIo University.
- ^ a b c d e f Judith Steinhoff-Morrison (1990). Bartolomeo Bulgarini and Sienese painting of the mid-fourteenth century. Princeton University. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
- ^ a b c Meiss, Millard (1931). "Ugolino Lorenzetti". The Art Bulletin. 13 (3): 376–397. doi:10.2307/3050804. JSTOR 3050804.
- ^ Steinhoff-Morrison, Judith “Bartolomeo Bulgarini and Sienese Painting of the Mid-Fourteenth century” PhD dissertation, Princeton University, 1990.
- ^ a b Beatson, Elizabeth H.; Norman E. Muller; Judith B. Steinhoff (1986). "The St. Victor Altarpiece in Siena Cathedral: A Reconstruction". The Art Bulletin. 68 (4): 610–631. doi:10.2307/3051044. JSTOR 3051044.
- ^ a b McClannan, Anne (2007). Fleming, K.E.; Adnan A. Husain (eds.). A Faithful Sea: The ReligiSous Cultures of The Mediterranean, 1200-1700. Oxford: Oneworld. ISBN 978-1851684960.
Further reading
edit- Boskovitz, Miklos, ed. The Alana Collection: Italian Paintings from the 13th to 15th century. Firenze: Edizioni Polistampa, 2009.
- Meiss, Millard. "Ugolino Lorenzetti". The Art Bulletin, Vol. 13, No. 3 (1931), pp. 376–397. Accessed: 06/04/2012 18:05. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3050804
- McClannan, Anne. “Bulgarini’s Assumption with Doubting Thomas: Art, Trade, and Faith in Post-Plague Siena”. Fleming, K.E., Adnan A. Husain ed. A Faithful Sea: The Religious Cultures of The Mediterranean, 1200-1700. Oxford: Oneworld, 2007. ISBN 978-1851684960
- Pope-Hennessy, John & Kanter, Laurence B. (1987). The Robert Lehman Collection I, Italian Paintings. New York, Princeton: The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press. ISBN 0870994794. (see index; plate 7)
- Steinhoff, Judith B. 2007. Sienese painting after the Black Death: artistic pluralism, politics, and the new art market. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.