Pietà by Giovanni Bellini - c. 1460 - 86 × 107 cm Pinacoteca di Brera Pietà by Giovanni Bellini - c. 1460 - 86 × 107 cm Pinacoteca di Brera

Pietà

tempera on panel • 86 × 107 cm
  • Giovanni Bellini - c. 1430 - 26 November 1516 Giovanni Bellini c. 1460

A pietà (meaning pity or compassion in Italian) is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus. This panel, dated to the years between 1465 and 1470, marks an evident emancipation of the artist Giovanni Bellini from the influence of Andrea Mantegna, to whom he was linked not just by cultural affinities but also by close ties of kinship (they were brothers-in-law).

The lesson of the Paduan artist is clearly visible in the incisiveness of the outlines and the sculptural plasticity of the figures, brought into the foreground to invade the space of the observer. Yet Bellini immerses the scene in an atmosphere of natural light, softening the tones and concentrating not so much on the construction of a rigorous perspective as on conveying the sorrowful humanity of the protagonists. In this way he creates a new language that will become, in the years to come, his personal and unmistakable stylistic mark.

Propertius, the great poet of the Augustan age whose verses are referred to on the strip along the sill, speaks of the capacity of an image to provoke tears—an effect observed with certain works, including this one.

We present this masterpiece thanks to the Pinacoteca di Brera.  : )

P.S. Here's everything you must know about all of Michelangelo’s Pietás!