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The Crucifixion
Matteo di Giovanni·1470s
Historical Context
Matteo di Giovanni's Crucifixion from the 1470s demonstrates this Sienese painter's ability to combine the emotional intensity of sacred narrative with the refined decorative tradition of his city. The Crucifixion, with its requirement to represent the central fact of Christian theology — Christ's redemptive death — demanded both theological accuracy and emotional power, and Matteo di Giovanni's version achieves this through careful attention to the expressive postures of the mourning figures flanking the cross. He trained in Siena under influences including Vecchietta and was aware of Florentine Renaissance innovations, but his work maintains a distinctly Sienese character: elongated figures, refined gold-work details, and an emotional warmth that reflects the city's long tradition of devotional painting going back to Duccio.
Technical Analysis
The mixed technique of tempera and oil with gold on wood panel shows Matteo's careful blending of traditional Sienese gold-ground painting with newer Renaissance spatial techniques, creating a richly layered devotional image.
Provenance
M. Chaff, Paris (as Mantegna); Baron Michele Lazzaroni, Paris (1863–1934); John E. Fairfax Murray, Florence (1849–1919); M. Knoedler & Co., New York City; James Parmelee, Washington D.C. (1855–1931); By bequest to The Cleveland Museum of Art
See It In Person
More by Matteo di Giovanni

The Dream of Saint Jerome
Matteo di Giovanni·1476

Saint Augustine's Vision of Saints Jerome and John the Baptist
Matteo di Giovanni·1476

Two Putti
Matteo di Giovanni·1490–1510
_Impresa_of_the_Medici_Family_and_Arms_of_the_Medici_and_Tornabuoni_Families_MET_DP164871.jpg&width=600)
The Triumph of Fame; (reverse) Impresa of the Medici Family and Arms of the Medici and Tornabuoni Families
Matteo di Giovanni·ca. 1449



