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The Last Supper
Andrea del Sarto·1526
Historical Context
This 1526 Last Supper is a major religious composition from Andrea del Sarto's mature period. Andrea had painted an earlier Last Supper fresco at the Convent of San Salvi in Florence (1511-1527), which Vasari praised as one of the most beautiful paintings in Florence and which even the soldiers of Charles V spared during the 1530 siege. Andrea del Sarto, active in Florence from around 1506 until his death in 1530, was among the most accomplished painters of the Italian High Renaissance. His synthesis of the dominant Florentine tradition — Leonardo's atmospheric modeling, Raphael's compositional grace, Michelangelo's figure authority — achieved a quality of technical perfection that earned him Vasari's famous epithet "the faultless painter." Working primarily in Florence, he produced altarpieces, frescoes, and devotional panels for the city's churches, religious confraternities, and private patrons, training in his workshop the painters who would become the founders of Florentine Mannerism.
Technical Analysis
The multi-figure composition demonstrates Andrea's ability to orchestrate complex narrative scenes with naturalistic characterization and spatial clarity, using his warm palette to unify the dramatic ensemble.
Look Closer
- ◆All twelve apostles show individualized physiognomies drawn from observed Florentine life.
- ◆The table's perspective recession is carefully constructed — del Sarto's architectural.
- ◆Judas is identifiable by his position and by turning away from Christ's gesture of blessing.
- ◆John resting against Christ's shoulder introduces tender intimacy into the formal apostolic.
See It In Person
More by Andrea del Sarto
More from the High Renaissance Period

Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist
Antonio da Correggio·c. 1515

Virgin and Child with Saint Anne, Saint Gereon, and a Donor
Bartholomaeus Bruyn the Elder·1520

Scenes from the Life of Saint John the Baptist
Bartolomeo di Giovanni·1490/95

The Martyrdom of Saint John the Baptist
Bernard van Orley·ca. 1514–15

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