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Masaccio 14011428?, Italian painter. He is the foremost Italian
painter of the Florentine Renaissance in the early 15th cent. Masaccios
original name was Tommaso Guidi. He was enrolled in the guild of St.
Luke in 1424. Most of the creations of his brief lifetime have perished.
Only four remain that are attributed to him without question: a polyptych
(1426) painted for the Church of the Carmine, Pisa, many of its panels
dispersed (now in London, Pisa, Naples, and Vienna) and some lost;
the great Trinity fresco in Santa Maria Novella, Florence, which revolutionalized
the understanding of perspective in painting; the Virgin with St.
Anne (Uffizi), an early work in collaboration with the painter Masolino
da Panicale; and his masterpiecea major monument in the history
of artthe frescoes in the Brancacci Chapel of Santa Maria del
Carmine, Florence, begun by Masolino and completed many years later
by Filippino Lippi. Leaving the chapel unfinished, Masaccio went to
Rome, where he died. Masaccios independent works in the chapel
include Expulsion from Eden, Peter and John Healing the Sick, Peter
and John Distributing Alms, Peter Baptizing, The Raising of the Kings
Son, and The Tribute Money. These frescoes had a great impact on Florentine
painting and were for generations the training school and inspiration
of painters, among them Michelangelo and Raphael. Masaccio imparted
a new sense of grandeur and austerity to the human figure. He used
light to give dimension to the contour and achieved a classic sense
of proportion. At the same time he created a diversity of character
within a unified group and emphasized the range of emotional expression
in heroic individuals. Masaccio is remembered primarily for his innovative
use of perspective. His originality and imagination place his work
in the tradition of Giotto and Michelangelo.
See studies by L. Berti (1967) and B. Cole (1980).
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright © 2001 Columbia
University Press
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