Pietro di Miniato
Pietro di Miniato or Pietro di San Miniato (* c. 1366 – † betw. 1430 and 1446) was an Italian painter, active in Florence and Prato, working in a Gothic style. He collaborated with a relative Antonio di Miniato di Piero, likely his father, active circa 1430 in and around Prato.[1] Among the works attributed to him are a painted crucifix in the St Louis Museum of Art, commissioned between ca. 1400 and 1420 by the Poor Clares, an order of Franciscan nuns, with the Virgin and Saint John the Baptist
a polyptych in the Museo Civico of Prato, a painted mural in the church of San Niccolò in Prato, and a mural in the Chapel of San Stefano of the Prato Cathedral, depicting the Virgin and child flanked by saints.[2] An Annunciation in Santa Maria Novella, Florence, long unattributed, is now identified as the work of Pietro di Miniato.
List of attributed works
- Crucifix, c. 1400–1420, tempera and gilding on wood, 219.7 × 144.8 cm, Saint Louis Art Museum (107-1932; 33594)
- Crucifixion with the Mourning Virgin and St John the Evangelist, c. 1420, tempera and gilding on wood, 57.5 x 27.3 cm, Philadelphia Art Museum (Louise and Walter Arensberg Collection, 1950-134-532)
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Crucifix, c. 1400–1420, Saint Louis Art Museum
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Partially uncovered fresco depicting the Martyrdom of St Sebastian in Sant'Ambrogio, Florence
References
- ^ Ranieri Guasti (ed.). Pel calendario pratese 1846–1851: memorie e studi di cose patrie. Prato 1845, p. 105.
- ^ Piccoli, Grandi Musei di Italia Archived 2014-04-27 at the Wayback Machine, Works in the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo di Prato.