In Venice the Byzantine style appears to have
offered a more stubborn resistance to the innovators than in Tuscany, or, in
fact, in any other part of Italy. Few, if any, of the allegorical subjects with
which Giotto and his scholars decorated whole buildings are to be found here,
and the altar pictures retain longer than anywhere else the gilt canopied
compartments and divisions, and the tranquil positions of single figures. It was
not until a century after the death of Cimabue and Duccio that the real
development of the Venetian School was manifested,cheap oil paintings, so that when things did begin
to move the conditions were not the same, and the results accordingly were
something substantially different.
The influence of the Byzantine style still hangs heavily over the work of
Nicolo Semitecolo, who was working in Venice in the
middle of the fourteenth century, as may be seen in the great altar-piece
ascribed to him in the Academy—the Coronation of the Virgin with fourteen scenes
from the life of Christ. In this work there is little of the general advancement
visible in other parts of Italy. It corresponds most nearly with the work of
Duccio of Siena, though without attaining his excellence; while the gold
hatchings and olive brown tones are still Byzantine. frames for oil paintings
An altar-piece, by Michele Giambono, also in the
Academy, painted during the first half of the fifteenth century, shows a more
decided advance, and even anticipates some of the later excellences of the
Venetian School. The drapery is in the long and easy lines which we see in the
Tuscan pictures of the period, and what is especially significant, in view of
the subsequent development of Venetian painting, the colouring is rich, deep,
and transparent, and the flesh tints unusually soft and warm. This is signed by
Giambono, and is one of his most important works, as well as the most complete,paintings reproductions, as it exists in its original state as an ancona or altar-piece divided
into compartments by canopies of joiners' work. It is unusual in form, inasmuch
as the central panel, though slightly larger than the pair on either side,
contains but a single figure. This figure was generally supposed to be the
Saviour, but it has recently been pointed out that it is S. James the Great, the
others being SS. John the Evangelist, Philip Benizi, Michael,oil paintings wholesale, and Louis of
Toulouse. Some of Giambono's finest work was in mosaic, and the walls and roof
of the Cappella de'Mascoli in S. Mark's may be regarded as the highest
achievement in mosaic of the early Venetian School. While this species of
decoration had given place to fresco painting elsewhere, it was here, in 1430,
brought to a pitch of perfection by Giambono which entitles this work to a
prominent place in the history of painting. oil paintings on canvas for sale
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