AGOSTINO DI DUCCIO - b. 1418 Firenze, d. 1481 Perugia - WGA

AGOSTINO DI DUCCIO

(b. 1418 Firenze, d. 1481 Perugia)

Florentine sculptor and architect. He was the most original if not the greatest sculptor of his time, and the only 15th century sculptor born in Florence who owed little to Donatello or Ghiberti. His fresh and lively style was linear and graceful with distinctive swirling draperies.

Reliefs at Modena Cathedral executed by 1442 are accepted as his earliest work. Some have seen in them indications of a debt to Jacopo della Quercia, and others of possible training by Luca della Robbia. In 1446 he fled Florence after being accused of stealing silver from a church, and from 1450 to 1457 he worked on the sculptural reliefs for the Tempio Malatestiano at Rimini.

His other memorable large work is the series of reliefs, partly in terracotta, on the façade of the Oratory of San Bernardino at Perugia, on which he worked 1457-61 as architect as well as sculptor. He executed also several delightful reliefs on the Virgin and Child.

A Miracle of San Bernardino of Siena
A Miracle of San Bernardino of Siena by

A Miracle of San Bernardino of Siena

In the Tempio Malatestiano Agostino di Duccio created a highly individual style where the Quattrocento Renaissance types of figures are wedded to swinging linear masses of linear fold patterns, spreading out over the surface of the relief. The concious unreality of these reliefs is further developed in his later work in Perugia, where in his Miracle of San Bernardino the draperies have become like ectoplasm and swirl round the figures in an unearthly symphony. Though these reliefs are among the finest products of the century they remained isolated with little or no following.

Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine
Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine by

Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine

Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine (detail)
Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine (detail) by

Angels Playing a Lute and Tambourine (detail)

Angels Playing a Viola
Angels Playing a Viola by

Angels Playing a Viola

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)
Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail) by

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)
Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail) by

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)

The picture shows a relief depicting playing children.

The contours are incised at right angles to the plane of the relief, and in many cases the heads are represented as perfect circles and other forms are reduced to their nearest geometrical equivalents.

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)
Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail) by

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)

The picture shows a relief depicting playing children.

The contours are incised at right angles to the plane of the relief, and in many cases the heads are represented as perfect circles and other forms are reduced to their nearest geometrical equivalents.

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)
Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail) by

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)

The picture shows a relief depicting playing children.

The contours are incised at right angles to the plane of the relief, and in many cases the heads are represented as perfect circles and other forms are reduced to their nearest geometrical equivalents.

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)
Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail) by

Cappella dei Giochi Infantili (detail)

Above a relief of playing children, the picture shows the SI monogram (from the initial of Sigismondo and Isotta’s names, or, according to others, the first two letters of the former).

The reconstruction of the church was commissioned by Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta from Leon Battista Alberti around 1450, and his monogram is present in numerous other places in the church.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Cumaean Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Phrygian Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Libyan Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Hellespontine Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Cimmerian Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Tiburtine Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Delphic Sibyl, one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows one of the ten Sibyls placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Prophet Isaiah, one of the two Prophets placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The picture shows the Prophet Micah (Micheas), one of the two Prophets placed in the niches of the Chapel of the Martyrs. Micah was one of the twelve minor prophets in the Old Testament.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The Ark of the Ancestors (Arca degli Antenati) in the Chapel of the Martyrs contains the bodies of some of Malatesta’s ancestors.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The Ark of the Ancestors (Arca degli Antenati) in the Chapel of the Martyrs contains the bodies of some of Malatesta’s ancestors.

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)
Cappella dei Martiri (detail) by

Cappella dei Martiri (detail)

The Ark of the Ancestors (Arca degli Antenati) in the Chapel of the Martyrs contains the bodies of some of Malatesta’s ancestors.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Saturn.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Diana, the goddess of Moon. (That time the Sun and the Moon were thought to belong to the planets.)

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 6 minutes):

Franz Schubert: An den Mond (To the Moon) (Goethe) D 296

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Mercury.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Venus riding across a sea, one of the most attractive reliefs in the chapel.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Cancer and a view of Rimini.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Cancer and a the relief of the Moon.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Aquarius. The firm flesh of Aquarius is treated with the same roundity and the same smooth transitions as the music-making angels in the Chapel of Isotta, and is seen in part through the transparent water and in part through striated drapery.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Libra.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Sagittarius.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Taurus.

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)
Cappella dei Pianeti (detail) by

Cappella dei Pianeti (detail)

The picture shows the sign of Virgin.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Rhetoric, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Ethics.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Agriculture.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Grammar, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the relief depicting Philosophy.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Logic, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Astronomy, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Music, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Arithmetic, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows Geometry, one of the seven Liberal Arts.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the Muse of Dance.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the Muse of Poetry (Apollo).

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the Muse of History.

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)
Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail) by

Cappella delle Arti Liberali (detail)

The picture shows the Muse of Poetry (Apollo).

Cappella di Isotta (detail)
Cappella di Isotta (detail) by

Cappella di Isotta (detail)

Cappella di Isotta (detail)
Cappella di Isotta (detail) by

Cappella di Isotta (detail)

Above a relief of angels, the picture shows the SI monogram (from the initial of Sigismondo and Isotta’s names, or, according to others, the first two letters of the former).

The reconstruction of the church was commissioned by Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta from Leon Battista Alberti around 1450, and his monogram is present in numerous other places in the church.

Cappella di Isotta (detail)
Cappella di Isotta (detail) by

Cappella di Isotta (detail)

The picture shows a relief depicting music-making angels.

Cappella di Isotta (detail)
Cappella di Isotta (detail) by

Cappella di Isotta (detail)

The picture shows a relief depicting music-making angels.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows curtain-drawing angels in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows curtain-drawing angels in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows a curtain-drawing angel in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows an angel holding the curtain in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Hope, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Prudence, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Charity, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Faith, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Fortitude, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)
Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail) by

Cappella di San Sigismondo (detail)

The picture shows Temperance, one of the Virtues seated in niches between pilasters in the Chapel of St Sigismund.

Dossal
Dossal by

Dossal

In Perugia, Agostino also carved a large stone and terracotta dossal (dismantled and reconstituted in 1484) for the altar of San Lorenzo, in the church of San Domenico, for the heirs of Lorenzo di Ser Giovanni. The altar is in the Chapel of San Lorenzo, a votive chapel in the right aisle. In its architectural structure the dossal recalls fa�ade of the Oratory of San Bernardino in Perugia.

Dossal (detail)
Dossal (detail) by

Dossal (detail)

The detail shows the Archangel Gabriel, a figure of the Annunciation.

Dossal (detail)
Dossal (detail) by

Dossal (detail)

The detail shows the Virgin Annunciate.

Dossal (detail)
Dossal (detail) by

Dossal (detail)

The detail shows the statue of St John the Baptist.

Dossal (detail)
Dossal (detail) by

Dossal (detail)

The detail shows the statue of St Lawrence.

Interior view
Interior view by

Interior view

Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta (1417-1468) decided to renovate the old church of San Francesco (Tempio Malatestiano) in Rimini, the traditional burial place of the Malatesta lords. He contracted Leon Battista Alberti for the design but entrusted the supervision of the construction to the builder and artist Matteo de’ Pasti. Alberti’s solution was to wrap the entire existing Gothic church in a marble classical skin, articulated with arches.

The interior of the church was designed by Agostino di Duccio, who from 1449 to 1456 was in Rimini, employed by Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta for the decoration. There Agostino supervised a large group of sculptors working on the most richly sculptured Renaissance building in Italy. He was probably personally responsible for all the major figural carving in the six chapels that were built in the church.

Whereas Alberti had concealed the Gothic elements of the pre-existing church with a classical skin, Agostino, like most of his contemporaries, preferred to apply classical vocabulary over and around Gothic structure, retaining pointed arches and framing double tiers of Gothic window tracery with classical rinceaux. Agostino’s manner is lavish, enhanced by polychromy and the recurrent appearance of coats of arms, chivalric helmets, and such exotic motifs as elephants, the Malatesta family emblem.

The six chapels are:

  1. Cappella di San Sigismondo (or Cappella delle Virtù), first chapel on the right, decorated by Virtues.

  2. Cappella dei Martiri (Cappella dei Antenati), first chapel on the left, dedicated to the Martyrs and bearing figures of Prophets and Sibyls.

  3. Cappella di San Michele Arcangelo (or Cappella di Isotta), second chapel on the right, decorated with with music-making cherubs.

  4. Cappella San Gaudenzio (or Cappella dei Giochi Infantili), second chapel on the left, decorated with playing children.

  5. Cappella dei Pianeti (or Cappella dello Zodiaco), third chapel on the right, with the Signs of the Zodiac, alluding to the perfection of the heavens.

  6. Cappella di Dan Giuseppe (or Cappella delle Muse and delle Arti Liberali), third chapel on the left, featuring the Liberal Arts, referring to the earthly realm.

View the ground plan of the church.

Madonna (detail)
Madonna (detail) by

Madonna (detail)

This Madonna is part of a sculpture group from the Oratory of La Maestà delle Volte.

Madonna and Child with Two Angels
Madonna and Child with Two Angels by

Madonna and Child with Two Angels

This relief came from the castle of Counts Spinelli in Rignano, Tuscany.

Madonna del Carmine
Madonna del Carmine by

Madonna del Carmine

In 1463 Agostino returned to Florence and enrolled in the Arte dei Maestri di Pietra e Legname (the sculptors’ guild). The marble relief of the Virgin and Child with Angels, originally in Santa Maria del Carmine, Florence, belongs to Agostino’s Flrentine period.

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini
Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini by

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini

In 1473 Agostino returned to Perugia as architect in charge of the design and execution of the Porta San Pietro, left unfinished at the time of his death. Among his other contemporary commissions, from small towns in Umbria and Lazio, are two Archangels for Acquapendente Cathedral (Viterbo) and two wall tombs, both originally in San Francesco, Amelia (Terni), those of Giovanni Geraldini, Bishop of Catanzaro (1476; Amelia Cathedral) and of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (1477; in situ).

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini
Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini by

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini

In 1473 Agostino returned to Perugia as architect in charge of the design and execution of the Porta San Pietro, left unfinished at the time of his death. Among his other contemporary commissions, from small towns in Umbria and Lazio, are two Archangels for Acquapendente Cathedral (Viterbo) and two wall tombs, both originally in San Francesco, Amelia (Terni), those of Giovanni Geraldini, Bishop of Catanzaro (1476; Amelia Cathedral) and of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (1477; in situ).

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)
Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail) by

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)
Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail) by

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)
Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail) by

Monument of Matteo and Elisabetta Geraldini (detail)

Musician angels
Musician angels by

Musician angels

In the Tempio Malatestiano Agostino di Duccio created a highly individual style where the Quattrocento Renaissance types of figures are wedded to swinging linear masses of linear fold patterns, spreading out over the surface of the relief.

Scenes from the Life of St Geminian
Scenes from the Life of St Geminian by

Scenes from the Life of St Geminian

Agostino’s first certain work, commissioned by Ludovico Forni for Modena Cathedral, was an antependium that included four relief scenes from the Life of St Geminian (1442; dismembered, statue of St Geminian in Modena Cathedral sacristy, reliefs built into the cathedral’s outer wall). The scenes are carved in high relief, the figures arranged in a stiff frieze formation.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows the high tympanum containing a relief of St Bernardino in Glory. St Bernardino of Siena is twice portrayed on the fa�ade of the Oratory: full-length on the tympanum and on the centre panel above the doorway.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows the upper pediment with God the Father.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows one of the four aedicules containing a statue.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows the double doors. The sculptured decoration above the doorway contains three narrative reliefs, including The Miracle of San Bernardino (left).

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The sculptured decoration above the doorway contains three narrative reliefs. St Bernardino of Siena is twice portrayed on the fa�ade of the Oratory: full-length on the tympanum and on the centre panel above the doorway, depicting the saint leading a bonfire of the vanities.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows musical angels framing the double doors.

Sculptures on the façade (detail)
Sculptures on the façade (detail) by

Sculptures on the façade (detail)

The photo shows a relief framing the double doors. It depicts an allegorical figure.

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order
St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order by

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order

This relief originally embellished the predella of an altar dedicated to St Lawrence in San Domenico, Perugia. It was commissioned in 1459 from Agostino di Duccio. When the altar was refashioned in 1482, the sculptures from the altar were given to the friars of San Domenico.

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail)
St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail) by

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail)

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail)
St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail) by

St Bridget of Sweden Receiving the Rule of Her Order (detail)

St Louis of Toulouse
St Louis of Toulouse by

St Louis of Toulouse

Agostino may have worked in the Venice studio of Bartolomeo Bon, whose influence is apparent in the statue of St Louis of Toulouse in the church of Sant’Alvise.

The Angel Gabriel
The Angel Gabriel by

The Angel Gabriel

This is one of the late works of the master, executed in the style of his statues made for the San Bernardino Chapel in Perugia. It was originally part of an Annunciation group.

View of the Cappella dei Giochi Infantili
View of the Cappella dei Giochi Infantili by

View of the Cappella dei Giochi Infantili

The Chapel of the Infant Games, the second chapel on the left-hand side, was presumably designed to correspond with the Chapel of Isotta, since its piers are decorated with three tiers of playing children. But these children lack the surface modelling of the children in the chapel opposite, their movement and their fluent line. The contours are incised at right angles to the plane of the relief, and in many cases the heads are represented as perfect circles and other forms are reduced to their nearest geometrical equivalents.

View of the Cappella dei Martiri
View of the Cappella dei Martiri by

View of the Cappella dei Martiri

There is some formal correspondence between the first chapel of the left-hand side (the Chapel of the Martyrs) and the first chapel on the right-hand side (the Chapel of St Sigismund). The niches used in the Chapel of St Sigismund, containing the Virtues, are concave, while those repeated on the opposite side of the church in the Chapel of the Martyrs, are flat. Here the figures of the Sibyls are for the most part posed on a single plane and do not protrude from the surface of the wall.

View of the Cappella dei Pianeti
View of the Cappella dei Pianeti by

View of the Cappella dei Pianeti

The Chapel of the Planets features the reliefs depicting the Planets and the Signs of the Zodiac. It is perhaps the greatest single achievement in the Tempio Malatestiano. On a formal plane the carvings in this chapel provide some of the most felicitous and appealing schemes in the whole of Italian relief sculpture. Especially notable are the landscapes which proceed from the International Gothic landscapes found in the first half of the fifteenth century throughout North Italy.

View of the Cappella delle Arti Liberali
View of the Cappella delle Arti Liberali by

View of the Cappella delle Arti Liberali

The Chapel of the Liberal Arts features reliefs of Muses and the seven Liberal Arts (comprising the Trivium: Grammar, Rhetoric, Logic and the Quadrivium: Geometry, Arithmetic, Music and Astronomy).

The carvings are closely related to the Planet reliefs, but tends towards visual patterns of a rather different kind. Instead of a design which fills the whole area of the relief, they contain figures drawn in upon themselves and isolated on their flat grounds.

View of the Cappella di Isotta
View of the Cappella di Isotta by

View of the Cappella di Isotta

The Chapel of Isotta houses the tomb of Isotta degli Atti, Pandolfo Malatesta’s lover and later his wife. The chapel is decorated with reliefs of music-making angels. The reliefs are controlled by a subtle sense for placing the image in its frame. Animated figures are shown in motion.

This chapel also houses Giotto’s Crucifix painted during his sojourn in Rimini.

View of the Cappella di San Sigismondo
View of the Cappella di San Sigismondo by

View of the Cappella di San Sigismondo

In the Chapel of St Sigismund (the Chapel of Virtues) the deeply carved figures of the Virtues are seated in niches between pilasters. The treatment of the drapery recalls that of the Virtues on Isaia da Pisa’s Chiaves monument in St John Lateran and may also have its source in Filarete, who visited Rimini about 1448 after abandoning work on the Chiaves tomb. In the postures, however, there is a residue of Venetian Gothic style.

There is some formal correspondence between the first chapel of the left-hand side (the Chapel of the Martyrs) and the first chapel on the right-hand side (the Chapel of St Sigismund). The niches used in the Chapel of St Sigismund, containing the Virtues, are concave, while those repeated on the opposite side of the church in the Chapel of the Martyrs, are flat. Here the figures of the Sibyls are for the most part posed on a single plane and do not protrude from the surface of the wall.

View of the façade
View of the façade by

View of the façade

Between 1457 and 1461 Agostino was working on the fa�ade of the oratory of San Bernardino, Perugia. Although the architectural framework of the fa�ade recalls Alberti’s design for San Francesco in Rimini, the sculpture, originally highly polychromed, is rich and intricate, emphasizing line and movement. Above a double door framed by reliefs of angels, a high tympanum contains a relief of St Bernardino in Glory. God the Father appears in the upper pediment, and four aedicules contain statues.

Virgin and Child
Virgin and Child by

Virgin and Child

Virgin and Child with Five Angels
Virgin and Child with Five Angels by

Virgin and Child with Five Angels

The style of this relief resembles sculptures in the Tempio Malatestiano at Rimini in Italy. Agostino di Duccio was responsible for much of the sculptural decoration there from 1449 until 1457. The attendant angels of the relief are particularly close in style to the Playing Children in the Chapel of the Infant Games in the Tempio, that were also probably carved by Agostino.

Virgin and Child with Four Angels
Virgin and Child with Four Angels by

Virgin and Child with Four Angels

This highly wrought marble relief of the Virgin and Child, is known as the d’Auvillers Madonna. It was executed for Piero di Cosimo de’ Medici (the Gouty, in Italian “il Gottoso”). It was donated by the Bonni�res de Wierre family to the church at Auvillers (Oise)

Feedback