Cimabue's Celebrated Madonna, originally called Cimabue's [Celebrated] Madonna [is] Carried in Procession through the Streets of Florence,[1] is an oil painting by English artist Frederic Leighton. Measuring more than two metres tall and more than five metres wide, the canvas was painted by Leighton from 1853 to 1855 in Rome as his first major work.[2]
Since 1988 the work has been displayed in the National Gallery, London, on long-term loan from the Royal Collection, where it was long hung prominently, high above the main vestibule, directly beyond the entrance to the gallery,[3] but more recently it has been in Room 45.[citation needed] In 2018 it was displayed at the top of the Sainsbury Wing staircase.[4]
The Madonna depicted, seen at a very narrow angle in the centre of the painting, is actually not by Cimabue, but instead it is the Rucellai Madonna by Sienese artistDuccio di Buoninsegna. This error is the result of the misattribution of this altarpiece by Vasari which lasted into Leighton's time, an error which was not corrected until 1889 by Franz Wickhoff.[7] Both the Rucellai Madonna and a similar work that is correctly attributed to Cimabue, the Santa Trinita Maestà, are displayed at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.
The Rucellai Madonna by Duccio di Buoninsegna
Detail from Leighton's painting, rectified projection of the Madonna
The Santa Trinita Maestà by Cimabue
Reception
The painting was an immediate success for Leighton when he presented it at the 1855 summer exhibition of the Royal Academy of Arts in London where it received near-universal acclaim.[8]Queen Victoria purchased it on the first day of the exhibition for 600 guineas. The National Gallery notes Victoria's diary entry about the painting: "There was a very big picture by a man called Leighton. It is a beautiful painting, quite reminding one of a Paul Veronese, so bright and full of light. Albert was enchanted with it—so much so that he made me buy it."[2] The English artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti wrote that the work proved Leighton's "great power of rich arrangement."[9] His brother, the art critic and writer William Rossetti, was not as enchanted: "His picture has largeness, but not greatness; style, but not intensity; design rather than thought; arrangement rather than conception: it is individual, not specially original."[10]
Panoramic display of Cimabue's Celebrated Madonna.
Notes
^"Arnolfo di Lapo" was the name given by Vasari for Arnolfo di Cambio, and was named as "di Lapo" in the original exhibition catalog.
Notes
^The "Celebrated" and "is" come and go in sources. See Cast, David (ed), The Ashgate Research Companion to Giorgio Vasari, 2014, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., ISBN147241392X, 9781472413925, google books; Barrington, Mrs Russell, The Life, Letters and Work of Frederic Leighton (Complete), Library of Alexandria, ISBN146556120X, 9781465561206, google books
Barker, Emma (1999). "Case Study 5: Academic into Modern: Turner and Leighton". In Perry, Gillian and Colin Cunningham (ed.). Academies, Museums, and Canons of Art. Yale University Press. p. 268. ISBN0300077432.
Barrington, Emilie Isabel Wilson (1906). The Life, Letters and Work of Frederic Leighton, vol. 2. Harvard University.
Clark, Robert (2009). Dark Water: Art, Disaster, and Redemption in Florence. Random House. p. 368. ISBN978-0767926492.