FINDART

The Creation of the World (detail of the dome fresco)

1378 · Baptistery, Padua

religious

The vision of paradise is followed in the next lower section of the dome with scenes from the Genesis. They begin beneath the figure of the Virgin with the Creation of the World, which is depicted in an extremely unusual form here. Outside the sphere of the fixed stars, represented by the signs of the zodiac sits the creator, borne by cherubim and seraphim, before the golden backdrop of the crystal sphere.

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The Creation of the World (detail of the dome fresco)

About the Artist

Giusto De' Menabuoi

13201391

Italian painter, complete name Giusto di Giovanni de' Menabuoi, also called Giusto Padovano or Giusto Fiorentino. He was a native of Florence, but all records of his activity and all surviving works are in or from northern Italy. Possibly trained under Bernardo Daddi or Maso di Banco, he was an imitator of Giotto. Together with the Veronese painter Altichiero, and following in the wake of the native Guariento, Giusto helped establish Padua as a major centre for the development of late 14th-century painting. His work illustrates the widening stylistic gulf in the years following the Black Death between the activities of Florentine painters working in Florence and those of artists either born there or exposed to the influence of Florentine art before the mid-century, but working further north, where, after c. 1350, the most significant developments of the Giottesque legacy took place. Beyond a shared Florentine tendency to monumental form, his art increasingly diverged from the style of Orcagna and his school, and Giusto’s expansion of the pictorial possibilities suggested by Giotto, Maso di Banco and Taddeo Gaddi in the early decades of the century is bolder than anything attempted by the painters of late 14th-century Florence. His career may be divided into two phases: work in Lombardy, 1350s and 1360s; and from c. 1370 in Padua, where he enjoyed the patronage of the Carrara court. In Padua he painted numerous frescoes, which probably must be attributed in part to his pupils Giovanni and Antonio da Padua.

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