Formative period
The documented facts of Piero della Francesca's life, which
are few, permit a reasonably accurate reconstruction of his
career and interests but not an exact chronology of his
surviving paintings. His father, Benedetto de' Franceschi, was
evidently a tanner and shoemaker, prosperous enough for his
son to become well educated and literate in Latin. Nothing is
known about Piero's early training as a painter, though it is
assumed that he was instructed by local masters who had been
influenced by Sienese art.
In 1439 Piero worked as an associate of Domenico Veneziano,
who was then painting frescoes for the hospital of Sta. Maria
Nuova in Florence, where the early Renaissance style was
beginning to flourish. There he probably studied the statuary
of Donatello and Luca Della Robbia, the buildings of Filippo
Brunelleschi, and the paintings of Masaccio and Fra Angelico,
and he might have read a theoretical treatise on painting by the
Humanist and architect Leon Battista Alberti. Undoubtedly, he
would have been directed to these luminaries by Domenico
Veneziano, whose own works demonstrate a Renaissance
emphasis on colour and light as elements of pictorial
construction. It was Piero's contact with the early Renaissance
art of Florence that provided the foundation of his own style.
Back in Sansepolcro by 1442, Piero was elected to the town
council. Three years later the Confraternitą della Misericordia
commissioned an altarpiece from him. This polyptych shows
Piero's indebtedness to the Florentines Donatello and
Masaccio, his fondness for geometric form, and the slowness
and deliberation with which he habitually worked--for the
Misericordia altarpiece was not completed until 1462.
Periodic retreat to the provincial isolation of Sansepolcro
seems to have been necessary for Piero's work. For the rest of
his life he alternated between the calm of Sansepolcro and
contact with the Humanistic life of the Renaissance in artistic
and intellectual centres such as Ferrara and Rimini.
Around 1448 Piero probably worked in the service of
Marchese Leonello d'Este in Ferrara, where he may have been
influenced by northern Italian art. In 1451, at another northern
Italian city, Rimini, he executed a splendidly heraldic fresco
(i.e., resembling a heraldic emblem in design) of "Sigismondo
Malatesta Before St. Sigismund" in the Tempio Malatestiano,
a memorial church built according to the architectural designs
of Alberti. Also to this early formative period before 1451
belongs "The Baptism of Christ."
Mature period
Piero della Francesca's mature style is revealed in frescoes
painted in the choir of the church of S. Francesco at Arezzo.
The decorations had been begun in 1447 by the elderly Bicci di
Lorenzo, who died in 1452; Piero presumably was retained to
complete the work shortly thereafter. The narrative cycle,
depicting "The Legend of the True Cross," was completed by
1466. Its simplicity and clarity of structure, controlled use of
perspective, and aura of serenity are all typical of Piero's art at
its best. Contemporary with the Arezzo cycle are a fresco of
the "Magdalen" in Arezzo cathedral, the "Resurrection" in the
Palazzo Comunale at Sansepolcro, and a "Madonna del Parto"
in the chapel of the cemetery at Monterchi. In 1454 a burgher
of Sansepolcro, Agnolo di Giovanni di Simone d'Angelo,
commissioned an altarpiece for S. Agostino that Piero,
characteristically, did not complete until 1469. The surviving
panels of the altarpiece reveal Piero's interest in the creation
of monumental human figures through the sculptural use of
line and light.
In 1459 Piero was in Rome to paint frescoes (now destroyed)
for Pope Pius II in the Vatican. "St. Luke" (Sta. Maria
Maggiore), executed at the same time, was probably done by
assistants in the studio he had established in Rome. More
fruitful was Piero's long association with Count (later Duke)
Federico da Montefeltro, whose highly cultured court was
considered "the light of Italy." In the late 1450s Piero painted
the "Flagellation of Christ" (see photograph), originally in the
sacristy of the cathedral of Urbino; its lucid perspectival
construction contrasts with treatment of the subject wherein
Christ is relegated to the background while three unidentified
figures dominate the foreground. The content of the picture
has become the focus of modern academic controversy. A
famous diptych portrait of Count Federico and his consort,
Battista Sforza (Uffizi, Florence), probably commemorates
their marriage in 1465. The paintings show Piero's respect for
visual fact in the unidealized features of the Count and in the
enchanting landscape backgrounds, which also indicate that he
had discovered Netherlandish painting. The reverse depicts the
couple in a triumphal procession accompanied by the Virtues.
The Count reappears as a kneeling donor in an altarpiece from
S. Bernardino, Urbino (now in the Brera, Milan). He, the
Madonna and her child, and accompanying saints are placed
before the apse (semicircular choir) of a magnificent Albertian
church. The painting may have been a memorial to Countess
Battista, who died in childbirth, and it has been dated between
1472 and 1474. The altarpiece is one of the most accomplished
Renaissance presentations of forms in space and exerted a
decided influence on the development of monumental
devotional paintings in northern Italian and Venetian art.
Last years
The last two decades of Piero's life were spent in Sansepolcro,
where paintings, now lost, were commissioned by local
churches in 1474 and 1478. In 1480 Piero became prior of the
Confraternitą di San Bartolomeo. Among the few extant
paintings from this period are the harmonious "Nativity," in
London, the "Madonna" from the church at Sta. Maria delle
Grazie near Senigallia, now in Urbino, and an awkwardly
constructed altarpiece in Perugia, "Madonna with Child and
Saints." The "Annunciation" from that altarpiece, however,
indicates that Piero's interest in perspectival problems
remained keen.
In his old age Piero seems to have abandoned painting in
favour of more abstruse pursuits. Between 1474 and 1482 he
wrote a treatise on painting, De prospectiva pingendi ("On
Perspective in Painting"), dedicated to his patron, the Duke of
Urbino. In its range of topics and method of organization, the
book follows Alberti and the ancient Greek geometer Euclid.
The principal manuscript, in Parma (Biblioteca Palatina), was
handwritten by the artist himself and illuminated by him with
diagrams on geometric, proportional, and perspectival
problems. A second treatise, the De quinque corporibus
regularibus ("On the Five Regular Bodies"), written some
time after 1482, follows Plato and Pythagoras in dealing with
the notion of perfect proportions. The manuscript, again
illustrated by Piero, is in the Vatican Library. Del abaco ("On
the Abacus," Laurentian Library, Florence) is a pamphlet on
applied mathematics.
Piero's fascination with geometry and mathematics is a
corollary of his own art; his manner of theoretical expression
owes much to his mentor Alberti and is analogous to that of
his younger contemporary Leonardo da Vinci; the rigour and
logic of the arguments, however, are unique to Piero.
A reliable 16th-century tradition claimed that Piero was blind
in his last years. If true, this must have occurred after 1490
because several autographs from that year survive. Moreover,
his will of 1486 refers to the painter as aged but sound of mind
and body.
Piero did not establish a lasting tradition in central Italy. Luca
Signorelli and Perugino, who are presumed to be his most
important pupils, followed the examples of other masters.
Although Piero's reticent art had little influence on the
experiments of his great Florentine contemporaries, he enjoyed
great fame for his scientific contributions. In 1497 he was
described as "the monarch of our times of painting and
architecture," and the biographer Giorgio Vasari gave him
high praise two generations later. In the 20th century, Piero's
career has been reconstructed and his position reevaluated,
giving proper credit to both the science and the poetry of his
art. (P.F.W.)
(b. c. 1420, Sansepolcro?, Republic of Florence--d. Oct. 12,
1492, Sansepolcro), painter whose serene, disciplined
exploration of perspective had little influence on his
contemporaries but came to be recognized in the 20th century
as a major contribution to the Italian Renaissance. The fresco
cycle "The Legend of the True Cross" (1452-66) and the
diptych portrait of Federico da Montefeltro, duke of Urbino,
and his consort (1465) are among his best known works.