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Fra Bartolomeo or Bartolommeo (, , ; 28 March 1472 – 31 October 1517), also known as Bartolommeo di Pagholo, Bartolommeo di San Marco, Bartolomeo di Paolo di Jacopo del Fattorino, and his original nickname Baccio della Porta, was an Italian Renaissance painter of religious subjects. He spent all his career in until his mid-forties, when he travelled to work in various cities, as far south as Rome. He trained with and in the 1490s fell under the influence of Savonarola, which led him to become a in 1500, renouncing painting for several years. Typically his paintings are of static groups of figures in subjects such as the Virgin and Child with Saints.

9780198691297, Oxford University Press.

He was instructed to resume painting for the benefit of his order in 1504, and then developed an idealized style, seen in his Vision of St Bernard of that year, now in poor condition but whose "figures and drapery move with a seraphic grace that must have struck the young with the force of revelation". He remained friends with Raphael, and each influenced the other.

His portrait of Savonarola remains the best known image of the reformer. Fra Bartolomeo painted both in oils and fresco, and some of his drawings are pure landscape sketches that are the earliest of this type from any Italian artist.


Life
He was born in Savignano di Prato, . He received the nickname of Baccio della Porta ("Baccio of the Gate"), for his house was near the Gate of San Pier Gattolini.

Starting from 1483 or 1484, by recommendation of Benedetto da Maiano, he apprenticed in the workshop of . In 1490 or 1491 he began a collaboration with Mariotto Albertinelli. In the late 1490s, Baccio was drawn to the teachings of Fra Girolamo Savonarola, who denounced what he viewed as vain and corrupt contemporary art. Savonarola argued for art serving as a direct visual illustration of the to educate those unable to read the book. From 1498 is his famous portrait of Savonarola, now in the Museo Nazionale di San Marco in Florence. The following year he was commissioned a fresco of the Universal Judgement for the Ospedale di Santa Maria Nuova, completed by Albertinelli and Giuliano Bugiardini when Baccio became a on 26 July 1500. The following year he entered the convent of San Marco.

He renounced painting for several years, not resuming until 1504 when he became the head of the monastery workshop in obedience to his superior. In that year he began a Vision of St. Bernard for Bernardo Bianco's family chapel in the , finished in 1507. Soon thereafter, visited Florence and befriended the friar. Bartolomeo learned perspective from the younger artist, while Raphael added skills in coloring and handling of drapery, which was noticeable in the works he produced after their meeting. With Raphael, he remained on the friendliest terms, and when he departed from Rome, left in his hands two unfinished pictures which Raphael completed.

At the beginning of 1508, Bartolomeo moved to to paint a Holy Father, St. Mary Magdalene and St. Catherine of Siena for the Dominicans of San Pietro Martire in , influenced somewhat by Venetian colorism. As the Dominicans did not pay for the work, he took it back to , where it can be seen now. Also in Lucca, in October 1509, he painted with Albertinelli an altarpiece of the Madonna and Child with Saints for the local cathedral. On 26 November 1510 commissioned him an altarpiece for the Sala del Consiglio of Florence, now in the Museum of San Marco. Two years later he finished another altarpiece for the cathedral of Besançon.

In 1513, he went to Rome, where he painted a Peter and Paul, now in the Pinacoteca Vaticana, while from the following years are the St. Mark Evangelist of in Florence and the frescoes in the Dominican convent of Pian di Mugnone, a of , just outside Florence. After a promised Feast of Venus for Duke Alfonso I d'Este of , of which only drawings remain, his last work is a fresco of Noli me tangere also in Pian di Mugnone.

He died in Florence in 1517.


Works

Style
Initially, his works showed the influence of Rosselli's assistant, Piero di Cosimo, and those of Domenico Ghirlandaio and . After his hiatus from 1500 to 1503, he seemed to change vision, taking from Raphael the representation of light and its effects over moving shapes.

Fra Bartolomeo's figures are generally small and draped. These qualities were alleged against him as defects, and to prove that his style was not the result of want of power, he painted the magnificent figure of the St Mark Evangelist (ranked as his masterpiece), and the undraped figure of . It is alleged that the latter was felt to be so strongly expressive of suffering and agony, that it was found necessary to remove it from the place where it had been exhibited in the chapel of a convent.

Fra Bartolomeo's compositions are remarkable for skill in the massing of light and shade, richness and delicacy of colouring, and for the admirable drapery of the figures, Bartolomeo having been the first to introduce and use the lay-figure with joints.

Among his pupils were Cecchino del Frate, Benedetto Ciamfanini, Gabriel Rustici, Ridolfo Ghirlandaio (the son of Domenico Ghirlandaio), and Fra Paolo Pistolese.Vasari, Vite, Terza Parte.


Works
All pieces listed are in oil on canvas.
  • Pugliese Tabernacle, (c. 1497–1499), , Florence
  • Assumption of Mary (1508), oil on canvas, , Berlin (destroyed in 1945)
  • Madonna in Glory with Saints (1512, with Albertinelli), Cathedral of Besançon, France
  • Holy Conversation (1512)
  • Christ Supported by Two Angels (c. 1514), Casa Vasari, Arezzo
  • St. Sebastian (1515), Alaffre Collection, Pézenas,

File:Louvre-Lens - Renaissance - 143 - RF 1945-9-141.jpg| Minerva (1490), , Paris Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist MET DT7215.jpg| Madonna and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist (1497), MET, New York Fra' Bartolomeo della Porta, Tabernacolo del Pugliese, c. 1497-99, Uffizi.jpg| Tabernacolo del Pugliese (c. 1497–1499), , Florence Fra bartolomeo, dio padre lucca.jpg| God the Father with Saints Catherine of Siena and Mary Magdalen (1509), for San Pietro Martire in Murano from San Romano, Lucca, Museo Nazionale di Villa Guinigi File:Fra Bartolommeo - The Rest on the Flight into Egypt with Saint John the Baptist, about 1509, 96.PB.15.jpg| The Rest on the Flight into Egypt with Saint John the Baptist (c. 1509), , Los Angeles File:Fra Bartolomeo 004.jpg| Madonna in Glory with Saints (1512), with Albertinelli, Besançon Cathedral File:Fra Bartolommeo - The Scene of Christ in the Temple - Google Art Project.jpg| Scene with Christ in the Temple (1516), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna File:Fra bartolomeo, cristo cornato di spine.jpg| Christ Crowned with Thorns File:Girolamo Savonarola by Fra Bartolommeo (1497).jpg| Girolamo Savonarola (1498), Museo Nazionale di San Marco, Florence File:Thomas Aquinas by Fra Bartolommeo.jpg| File: Portrait of a Man MET DT8842.jpg| Portrait of a Man (1497–1517), MET, New York


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