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Among the Spanish
painters whose style may be regarded as transitional between Gothic and
Renaissance, the foremost is undoubtedly Pedro Berruguete, a native of
Parades de Nava in the province of Palencia. His pre-eminence derives
from eclecticism and the spirit of humanity that permeate his art. Even
during his apprenticeship, Berruguete had to struggle to master a number
of divergent influences. After an early period in Flanders, or in the
profoundly Flemish atmosphere of the Castilian Gothic, he went to Italy,
where he remained for several years. These different elements of his training,
perfectly assimilated by his unusually receptive, but stoutly Spanish
nature, led him to a style rooted in Gothic ideals and Gothic forms, but
Renaissance in the warmth of its humanism. His later painting reveals
a certain progression toward a Hispano-Flemish Gothicism.
The first historical
reference to Berruguete relate to his stay at Urbino. The great condottiere,
Federigo di Montefeltro, duke of Urbino, had summoned
Joos van Wassenhove
to decorate the library and study of his magnificent palace with allegories
of the liberal arts and portraits of Biblical and pagan thinkers. Berruguete
may have collaborated with him, but there is no doubt that the allegories
and many of the more vigorous portraits of the series are by his hand
alone. He also painted the solemmn portrait of Federigo and his son (Ducal
Palace, Urbino), which gives some idea of his mastery of tactile values
and of the airy qualities of physical space, perfectly suggested in depth.
These paintings were all executed between 1480 and 1481. During his stay
at Urbino, Berruguete completed a certain amount of work which has since
remained in Italy. Moreover, he also painted the hands of the portrait
of Montefeltro in the famous picture by Piero della Francesca in the Brera
Gallery, Milan.
In 1483 Berruguete
was busy in Toledo cathedral, working on the now-lost mural decoration
of the cloister. Judging from its style the retable of Santa Eulalia in
his native village must have been painted during the last ten years of
the fifteenth century. Its narrative scenes, the naturalism of which reflects
the life of contemporary Castile, gave the artist an opportunity to demonstrate
his ability and the final victory over primitivism. The figures of kings
and prophets on the predella establish Berruguete as the forerunner of
the Spanish portraitists of the seventeenth century. His retable of St
John the Baptist, preserved in Santa Maria del Campo (Burgos), is impressive
in the strength of the figures and the clarity of the construction. Even
more important, as an ensemble, is the retable of St Thomas in Avila,
the best of its numerous scenes being the vision of the saint overcoming
temptation. The persistence of the Gothic tradition is revealed in the
free use of gold and the abundance of brocades.
Among Berruguete's
numerous works hardly less important than the previously cited are the
Annunciation in the Carthusian monastery of Miraflores and the Holy Family
signed and dated 1500, now in a private collection in Paredes de Nava.
Berruguete's
influence is strongly apparent in the work of various painters who were
active in Castile and Leon during the first third of the sixteenth century.
Works
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