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UCCELLO : A NEW CONCEPT IN ART

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It was also around the 1430's that Uccello painted his two versions of Saint George and the Dragon. The one exhibited at the Jacquemard-André Museum in Paris appears somewhat archaic while one should note some resemblance regarding the profile of the woman shown in the painting with that in the Queen of Sheba's suite painted by Piero della Francesca. The other one, now in the National Gallery, London, is less rigid in style with the figures integrated in the background space area while the Knight and his horse are represented almost full-faced in simplified geometric volumes to facilitate the perception of perspective, a method he used in later paintings. In this work, Uccello also gave a hint of his extraordinary inventive talents as a colourist, applying patches suggesting an apparent attempt to approach abstraction.

In 1443, Uccello worked again for the cathedral of Florence, decorating the big clock with four heads of prophets and producing from 1443 until 1445 designs for stained-glass works showing the Nativity and the Resurrection. In 1447, he painted a fresco representing the Deluge in Santa Maria Novella. Two scenes of the life of Noah have been preserved while two other were destroyed in the flood, which devastated Florence in 1966. It was around 1447 that Uccello was believed to have produced the painting called “The Five Founders of Renaissance Art” now in the Louvre Museum.

There is no solid proof of the authenticity of that work and experts only assume that Uccello painted it. Besides representing himself, he painted the full-size portraits of Antonio Manetti, the mathematician with whom he studied geometry, Giotto, considered as the inventor of relief, Brunelleschi the architect, as the exponent of perspective and new proportions and his friend Donatello, who interpreted the ratio of volumes in space.

Fra Angelico, who worked under Gothic influences nor Masaccio were represented in this important painting.

Between 1445 and 1448, Uccello went to Padua and painted a series of paintings called the “Giants” in the Vitaliani House but these works, which much impressed Mantegna, were eventually destroyed.


Uccello, Paolo
"The Rout of San Romano", c. 1456
National Gallery, London

Uccello reached fame ultimately with his three episodes of the “Battle of San Romano” painted between 1456 and 1460 which are now dispersed in the Louvre, in the Uffizzi in Florence and in the National Gallery, London.

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