The taking of Pisa - unknown Florentine master of the 1460s

Detail of left.



A mid-15th-century siege scene showing a tented camp in the field. In the background a siege-gunner is setting off a bombard. While the condottieri preferred not to expend their energies in lengthy sieges, it was sometimes necessary to do so. The colours of the tents and the richly caparisoned horsemen are nothing less than luxuriant. (Detail from The Taking of Pisa by an unknown Florentine master of the 1460s).



Unknown Artist, Florence, 15th century, Italian, 1460s
Title: The Taking of Pisa
Date: late 1460s
Medium: Tempera and gold leaf on poplar panel
Dimensions: 61.5 x 205.7 cm
Credit Line: Bequeathed, Sir Hugh Lane, 1918
Object Number: NGI.780
Provenance: Collection Charles Butler, Esq.; bequeathed, Sir Hugh Lane, 1918

Description
These two decorative panels (NGI.778 & NGI.780) illustrate famous Florentine victories. The defeat of the Milanese army on the river Tiber, near Anghiari, on 29 June 1440, made Florence the rulers of Tuscany. This is the earliest depiction of the battle and may have influenced Leonardo da Vinci’s lost fresco in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence.

The siege of Pisa lasted eight months and ended on 9 october 1406. the Florentines entered the city with bread on their lances for the starving inhabitants, as seen being prepared in the foreground of the painting. The unknown artist captures both the pageantry and brutality of Renaissance war and carefully identifies the various towns, even including the famous ‘leaning’ Tower of Pisa. The scenes not only celebrate two key Florentine victories against neighbouring powers but they also pay tribute to members of the Capponi family, who contributed on both occasions to the success of the city’s cause, and for whom these panels may have been painted.

Label Text
This is one of a pair of painted panels, by an unknown artist, that illustrate famous Florentine military victories of the fifteenth century. This panel depicts the Florentines besieging the Tuscan city of Pisa in 1406. The scene can be read from left to right, with Florence visible in the distance at left and Pisa, with its distinctive leaning tower, to the right. The siege lasted eight months, and many people died of starvation. The artist shows the Florentines entering the walled city after the surrender; the soldiers carried bread, skewered on their lances, to feed the starving citizens.
National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin

Detail of the right of 'The taking of Pisa' - unknown Florentine master of the 1460s
Both sections of 'The taking of Pisa' on one page
Back to the full image of this painting of 'The Taking of Pisa' - unknown Florentine master of the 1460s