Santa Maria del Carmine, Pisa

Santa Maria del Carmine is a Roman Catholic church in Pisa, Italy known for its altarpiece.

Church of Santa Maria del Carmine
Facade
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ProvincePisa
Location
LocationPisa, Italy
CountryItalia
Geographic coordinates43°42′46.04″N 10°24′1.36″E
Architecture
TypeChurch
StyleRenaissance, Baroque
Groundbreaking1328
Completed1835

History

The church was originally built for the Carmelite order in 1325-1328.[1] By 1425, it was decorated with a famed, now dispersed, polyptych by Masaccio. Only one panel of the altarpiece remains in Pisa in the National Museum of San Matteo.[2]

The altarpiece for the Chapel of St. Julian is by Masaccio,[3] assisted by Andrea di Giusto, who painted the predella and assisted with the central panel, "Madonna and Child with Angels".[4]

The church underwent many reconstructions across the centuries. Both the church and the adjoining monastery underwent extensive transformations between the second half of the 16th century and 1612, when it was newly consecrated.[1] The present simple façade was designed by Alessandro Gherardesca, in the 1830s. The interior has an organ by Andrea Ravani made in 1613, and altars with painting by Baccio Lomi, Aurelio Lomi, Santi di Tito, Alessandro Allori, Francesco Curradi, and Andrea Boscoli.

Since April 2021 the building is closed for an extensive restoration campaign. It is scheduled to reopen in 2022.[5]

Works of Masaccio formerly at Santa Maria del Carmine

See also

References

  1. "Chiesa di S. Maria del Carmine", Turismo Pisa
  2. Dunkerton, Jill and Gordon, Dillian. "The Pisa Altarpiece", The Panel Paintings of Masolino and Masaccio: The Role of Technique, (Carl Brandon Strehlke, ed.) Milan, 2002, 89–109.
  3. Alambritis, Maria. "This Day in History: November 29 1425", Italian Art Society
  4. Rowland, Eliot W., "Massacio: Saint Andrew and The Pisa Altarpiece", Getty Museum Studies on Art
  5. "Pisa, Chiesa del Carmine: restauri in corso". 7 September 2021.

Sources

  • Barsali, U.; U. Castelli; R. Gagetti; O. Parra (1999). Storia e Capolavori di Pisa. Florence: Bonechi.
  • Donati, Roberto. Pisa. Arte e storia. Narni: Plurigraf.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.