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Renaissance Art

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I am Marco Petrucci, artisan in the bottega of Paolo Uccello, in the city of Firenze in the year 1442. I have been apprenticed in this workshop since I was 10 years old. My family chose this profession for me because it provides steady work in our city that is becoming known as a place of beauty and learning because of the support and commissions of the wealthy families such as the Medici. My family, in the cloth trade, paid dearly for my apprenticeship almost 14 years ago. I am now a paid assistant in the bottega, having mastered all the skills that the master has taught me, including the "perspective" of which Master Paolo is so obsessed. Unfortunately, this obsession with perspective occupies much of his time and our large commissions are few. I am pleased to say that we recently completed a much needed commission, of which Master Paolo has put me in charge as I was recently admitted to the Guild of Arte dei Medici e Speziali.

A wealthy wool merchant by the name of Astole Capitelli has arranged a splendid marriage of his daughter, Isabella, to a member of the Strozzi banking family. While the groom, Massimo, is a member of a minor branch of the family, his father is a cousin to the illustrious Filippo, this marriage will greatly enhance the prestige of the bride's family and will enrich the coffers of the groom's family as her dowry is reported to be 500 gold florins in coin. In addition, she will bring jewelry and household goods worth another 500 florins. Among these possessions will be two cassoni that her father ordered and I painted with the help of the apprentices and, on occasion, Master Paolo himself. Our bottega is well known for the quality of our cassone painting.

The two cassoni were built by the foremost joinery shop in Florence. They were constructed of the finest walnut with fluted pilasters at the four corners and carved friezes of vegetal motifs in the classical manner around the front of the panels, which I painted. They are 1.5 meters across, .5 meters tall and .5 meters deep. The center panel containing the painting is 440 cm by 480 cm. The end panels were carved with the crests of both families and they sit upon simple bracket feet. The wood was gilded here in the bottega by the apprentices to further enhance the painted panels. The gilding of the wood greatly increased the cost, but the cassoni should make an impressive display when they are paraded through the streets of Firenze as the bride makes her way to her new home with the groom's family. The ironsmith forged the hardware, which was added when the paintings were completed.

The contract for the painting between Signor Capitelli and Master Paolo was explicit as to the subject, composition and materials to be used:

That this day 13 March 1442 Signor Astole Capitelli commits and entrusts to Paolo Uccello the painting of two panels on cassoni to be provided by the said Signor Capitelli; the panels which the said Paolo is to color and paint in the manner shown in drawings on paper with those figures and in that manner shown in it, in every particular to what I, Astole Capitelli, think best, not departing from the manner and composition of the said drawings; and he must color the panel at his own expense with good colors and with powdered gold on such ornaments as demand it and all carved wood surfaces, with any other expense incurred on the same panels, and the blue must be ultramarine of the value about four florins the ounce; and he must have delivered complete the said cassoni within six months from today, and he must receive as the price of the cassoni as here described 115 florins if it seems to me, the abovesaid Astole Capitelli that they are worth it.

The initial proposal that Master Paolo made to Signor Capitelli for the cassoni were scenes from the battle of Heraclius and Chosroes as Heraclius retrieved the true cross which Chosroes had stolen in Jerusalem. The initial drawings were replete with horses, flags, scenes of battle and the warriors wearing the mazzocchi so characteristic of Master Paolo. They were to have showcased Master Paolo's talents for scenes of action and his mastery of perspective. One panel would show Heraclius storming the astrological tower of Chosroes and the other should show Heraclius as he decapitates Chosroes on his throne. Signor Capitelli rejected these designs as inappropriate scenes for a young bride. He desired images that would instruct his daughter in her proper role as a wife and mother, primarily maternal piety and fertility. Signor Capitelli also specified that no images be painted on the underside of the lid, as has become common. He specifically requested an annunciation and requested new drawings before the contract could be presented to the notary.

The second set of drawings presented to Signor Capitelli, shown below, depicted

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