a fine piece of work in Perugino’s more mannered
style. Above, God the Father, in a glory of cherubim
with a worshipping angel on either side, blesses Madonna,
who in mid-heaven gazes upward, seated on a cloud,
in a mandorla of cherubs, surrounded by four angels
playing musical instruments, while two others are
at her feet following her in her flight; below, three
saints, with St. Michael, stand disconsolate.
In the Pieta, painted much earlier, where the dead
Christ lies on His Mother’s knees, while an
angel holds the head of the Prince of Life on his
shoulders, and Mary Magdalen weeps at his feet, and
two saints, St. John and St. Joseph, perhaps, watch
beside Him, there might seem to be little to hold
us or to interest us at all; the picture is really
without life, just because everything is so unreal,
and if we gather any emotion there, it will come to
us from the soft sky, full of air and light, that
we see through a splendid archway, or from a tiny glimpse
of the valley that peeps from behind Madonna’s
robe. And surely it was in this valley, on a
little hill, that, as we may see in another picture
here, Christ knelt; yes, in the garden of the world,
while the disciples slept, and the angel brought Him
the bitter cup. Not far away is Jerusalem, and
certain Roman soldiers and the priests; but it is not
these dream-like figures that attract us, but the world
that remains amid all interior changes still the same,
and, for once in his work, those tired men, really
wearied out, who sleep so profoundly while Christ
prays. In the Crucifixion all the glamour, the
religious impression that, in Perugino’s work
at least, space the infinite heaven of Italy, the
largeness of her evening earth, make on one, is wanting,
and we find instead a mere insistence upon the subject.
The world is dark under the eclipsed sun and moon,
and the figures are full of affectation. Painted
for the convent of St. Jerome, it was necessary to
include that saint and his lion, that strangely pathetic
and sentimental beast, so full of embarrassment, that
looks at one so wearily from many an old picture in
the galleries of the world. If something of that
clairvoyance which created his best work is wanting
here, it has vanished altogether in that Deposition
which Filippino Lippi finished, and instead of a lovely
dream of heaven and earth, one finds a laboured picture
full of feats of painting, of cleverness, and calculated
arrangement. This soft Umbrian world of dreamy
landscape, which we find in Perugino’s pictures,
is like a clearer vision of the land we already descry
far off with Fra Angelico, where his angels sing and
his saints dance for gladness.
It is a different and a more real life that you see in the work of Fra Lippo Lippi. Realism, it is the very thought of all Florentine work of the fifteenth century. Seven pictures by the Frate have been gathered in this gallery,—the Madonna and Child Enthroned, the St. Jerome in the Desert, a Nativity, a Madonna adoring Her Son, and the great Coronation of the Virgin, the Archangel Gabriel and the Baptist, and a Madonna and St. Anthony.