Artist: Frederic Leighton, 1st Baron Leighton (English, 1830-1896) known as Sir Frederic Leighton between 1878-1896)
Title: Cimabue’s Celebrated Madonna, originally called Cimabue’s [Celebrated] Madonna [is] Carried in Procession through the Streets of Florence
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original oil on canvas by master engraver Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich (German, 1712 – 1774)
Dimensions: Image Size 5 x 10 3/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 14 x 19 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
The altarpiece was commissioned in 1285 by a Dominican fraternity, the Company of Laudesi, and although Vasari attributed the panel to Cimabue it is now known to be by Duccio, who is named in the contract. In Leighton’s imaginative reconstruction Cimabue, wearing white and crowned with a laurel wreath, leads his pupil Giotto by the hand. On the far right Dante, leaning against a wall with his back to the viewer, watches the procession. The mounted figure bringing up the rear is probably King Charles of Anjou. Various other artists make up the rest of the crowd carrying the trestle upon which the altarpiece sits.
Frederic Leighton was an English painter and sculptor. He spent much of his youth travelling on the Continent with his family. This cosmopolitan background was of great importance to his development as an artist. Between 1855 and 1859 Leighton was based in Paris. The period marks the beginning of a transition in his work, from the exact draughtsmanship and historical detail of the Nazarenes to a broader synthesis of influences, embracing the painterly effects of Venetian art, the realistic landscapes of Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot and Charles-François Daubigny and the classical subject-matter of Thomas Couture’s followers. The years 1859–64 were marked for Leighton critical hostility. He was increasingly preoccupied with the formal problems of academic painting. The psychological content of Leighton’s work became increasingly complex in the late 1860s and the 1870s. Canvases of this period frequently show the confrontation between the forces of life and death. Leighton’s interest in sculpture was a natural extension of his increasingly sculptural treatment of the painted canvas. After his election as President of the Royal Academy in 1878, Leighton was increasingly regarded as the leader of the Victorian art establishment. The themes already dominant in his art remained constant throughout the last 20 years of his life. Increasingly in his last years a note of melancholy entered his work. Leighton died exhausted by his battle with heart disease and the demands of his public role as President of the Royal Academy. It is significant that he left no school of pupils to continue a tradition that itself was almost exhausted.