Treasure Museum of the basilica of Saint Francis in Assisi

Coordinates: 43°04′28.31″N 12°36′21.11″E / 43.0745306°N 12.6058639°E / 43.0745306; 12.6058639

14th century Venetian Madonna and child found in the Treasure Museum

The Treasure museum of the basilica of Saint Francis contains a collection of sacred art that is on display in two halls found on the northern side of the Cloister of Pope Sixtus IV which is part of the Sacro Convento in Assisi, Italy. The entrance is found on the second level of the renaissance cloister behind the apse of the celebrated Basilica of Saint Francis which houses the remains of St. Francis of Assisi. Since 1986 the Museum has also displayed a collection of works donated to the Conventual Franciscan Friars by the Secular Franciscan and American art critic, Frederick Mason Perkins, who died in Assisi in October 1955.

The Museum is part of the Associazione Musei Ecclesiastici Italiani (AMEI) and the network Museale Ecclesiastica Umbra (MEU).

History

In 1930, three years after the return of the Basilica and the Sacred Convent to the friars, the first exposition of the Treasure was put on display in the hall of Pope Pius XI at the western end of complex. The exhibition was designed to honor those works of the original patrimony which survived not only the ravages of time, but especially the plundering by Napoleon's troops (in 1798 nearly 390 kilograms of vestments in silver and other valuables were stolen). These works also survived the suppression of religious orders in 1866 during Italy's unification, when in any case the room in which the Treasure was kept, at the bottom of the imposing bell tower, was already in a sadly dilapidated state.[1]

From documents found in the archives, especially from the old sacristy inventories (the first of which was taken in 1338), we can learn something about the evolution of the collection. But other sources also testify to the Treasure's development: the first biographies of the saint attest, for example, how in 1230 on occasion of the translation of Francis's body to the new church dedicated to him, Pope Gregory IX sent as a gift "a gold cross studded with precious stones in which is set a relic of the wood of Christ's Cross. And with it decorative objects, liturgical objects and other objects to be used for serving at the altar, and extremely precious and magnificent sacred vestments."[2]

As many other precious gifts amassed during these early decades, their necessary care created not a little difficulty and maybe also caused the followers of St. Francis, the little Poor One, to have some misgivings. So in 1253, to resolve these difficulties, Pope Innocent IV intervened with this bull "Dignum Extimamus" recognizing that the friars were permitted use of these gifts but were not their owners, just as was the case for the entire sanctuary complex as directed by the Apostolic See. At the same time, he forbid the removal of any of these objects from the Basilica. This was reaffirmed by Pope Clement X in 1703.[3]

Site

It's essential that the Treasure's exposition be considered within the context of the monumental complex, made up by the Basilica and the Sacred Convent, that constitutes the original location for which the Treasure was formed and for which some works were in fact specifically made. The rooms in which the Museum is found today were part of the original construction of 1228, made at the bidding of Pope Gregory IX to the community of friars. This area would certainly have been used even if for short stays by the Pope who had put the entire complex under his immediate jurisdiction.

In 1756 this area, sitting directly over the old dormitory (now known as the Sala Romanica), underwent heavy reconstruction in the Neo-gothic style, which is why it is today known as the Gothic Hall. It is precisely in this room that from 1977 the Treasure has been on view, while in the adjoining room, towards the so-called Papal Hall (the first site of the Museum), is the Sala Rossa, or Red Hall, in which since 1986 the F. M. Perkins Collection has been on display.

The current arrangement of the works dates from the year 2000 when the Museum was reopened after extensive repairs were made to the structural damage caused by the earthquake of September 1997.

Works

Despite the impoverishment suffered during the course of its history, the Museum still contains works that can be admired for their great beauty and notable historical and artistic interest, allowing us only to imagine how much grander the colletion was up until the end of the 18th century, when it remained in large portion intact.[4]

The collection contains for the most part works of the so-called minor arts, although it does contain some sculpture and paintings. Among that which has survived from the very start of the collection, we find clear testimony of the Treasure's international character in works of French origin (like the illuminated manuscripts from Paris from the middle of the 13th century; gold and silver metalwork, among which is the magnificent reliquary of the Seamless Garment as well as the reliquary of the thorn from the Crown of Thorns in classic Parigian gothic style from the second half of the 12th century; and also an elegant Madonna and Child in ivory, also in the purest French gothic of the 14th century),[5] of Flemish origin (the tapestry of Pope Sixtus IV and a few ivory carvings), and of Germanic origin (the clock donated in 1701 by the Austrian Emperor Leopold I to Fr. Vincenzo Coronelli, and a few precious metal works from Salzburg).

Gold and silver metalwork predominates: the reliquaries come in various forms and styles, and are from various places and times. Some are distinguished by their uniqueness, for example those of Saint Andrew (13th century) and Saint Ursula (14th century), decorated with gilded and engraved glass. Among the altar vessels are a number of chalices, from different epochs, of which the most celebrated is surely that of gold-plated silver and enamels made by Guccio di Mannaia and gift of Pope Nicholas IV, the first Franciscan pope, who reigned from 1288-1292.

Also on display are: two rare Sicilian silk dossals from the beginning of the 13th century, works of Venetian glass (a crystal cross with miniatures from the early 14th century), and a number of painted works among which is the processional cross, painted on both sides, by the Master of the Blue Crucifix (late 13th century), and two altar panels by Tiberio di Assisi[6] and Lo Spagna,[7] both working at the end of the 15th and beginning of the 16th centuries. Among the textiles deserving special mention is the Florentine altar-frontal which was based on a drawing by Antonio del Pollaiolo and donated to the Basilica by Pope Sixtus IV in (perhaps?) 1478 on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the canonization of Saint Francis.[8]

The Frederick Mason Perkins Collection

In the second half of the 20th century, the Perkins Collection, made up of 56 paintings and a sculpture spanning the 14th to the 16th century, was donated to the Museum. The collection contains, to name only a few items, a portrait of Saint Francis by Beato Angelico, a Madonna and Child by Garofalo, two panel paintings by Giovanni di Paolo and three by Pietro Lorenzetti, a Saint Sebastian by dell’Ortolano[9] and a Saint Christopher by Sassetta.

Exposition

The Treasure (found in the Sala Gotica)

Painted works

Manuscripts

Textiles

Reliquaries

Chalices

Sculpture

The Perkins Collection (found in the Sala Rossa)

Gallery of Images

Treasure

Paintings

Perkins Collection

See also

Notes

  1. Nessi,  pp. 22-23.
  2. Leggenda dei tre compagni, 72: Fonti francescane 1486
  3. With the bull Cum sicut dilecti filii of 13 December 1703 it was forbidden to remove any objects whether for liturgical use or otherwise from the church or convent.
  4. Nessi,  p. 23.
  5. "Gothic Ivories". Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  6. The altarpanel shows the Crucifixion between saints and angels. It was commisioned by the confraternity of the Disciplinati in the first decade of the 17th century for the chapel of Saint Anthony the Abbot in the Lower Church.
  7. The panel was commisioned in 1516 by the Third Order of Saint Francis for the chapel of Saint Catherine in the Lower Church. It was later moved to the chapel of Saint Louis, and was placed in the museum probably after being on loan for an exposition in Spoleto celebrating the 100th annivesary of the death of the artist.
  8. 1 2 Bargioli,  pp. 244-245
  9. 1 2 Michele Danieli, Scheda 48 in: Natura e maniera.
  10. Kanter, Laurence B.; Palladino, Pia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.1). Assisi. pp. 56–61.
  11. Kanter, Laurence B.; Palladino, Pia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.2). Assisi. pp. 62–65.
  12. Kanter, Laurence B.; Palladino, Pia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.3). Assisi. pp. 66–67.
  13. Tonei, Alessandro (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.4). Assisi. pp. 68–69.
  14. Kanter, Laurence B.; Palladino, Pia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.5). Assisi. pp. 70–71.
  15. Kanter, Laurence B.; Primarosa, Yuri (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.17). Assisi. pp. 92–93.
  16. Primarosa, Yuri (2010). Verdon, Timothy, ed. Gesù: il corpo, il volto nell'arte. Milano: Silvano editoriale. pp. 234–235.
  17. Lurati, Patricia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.23). Assisi. pp. 104–105.
  18. The panel was commisioned in 1516 by the Third Order of Saint Francis for the chapel of Saint Catherine in the Lower Church. It was later moved to the chapel of Saint Louis, and probably after being on loan for an exposition in Spoleto for the 100th annivesary of the death of the artist was placed in the museum.
  19. Sapori,  p. 247; Francesco Ortenzi, Scheda n. 83 in: Pintoricchio, a cura di Vittoria garibaldi, Francesco Federico Mancini, Milano, Silvana editoriale, 2008, pp. 326-327.
  20. 1 2 3 Alessandro Tomei, Scheda n. 28
  21. Patricia Lurati, Scheda n. 34
  22. Patricia Lurati, Scheda n. 35,
  23. Patricia Lurati, Scheda n. 35
  24. Lurati, Patricia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.37). Assisi. pp. 132–135.
  25. Tomei, Alessandro (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.38). Assisi. pp. 136–137.
  26. Utro, Umberto (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.39). Assisi. pp. 138–141.
  27. Utro, Umberto (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.40). Assisi. p. 142.
  28. Lurati, Patricia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.41). Assisi. p. 143.
  29. Tomei, Alessandro (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.49). Assisi. pp. 154–155.
  30. Utro, Umberto (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.53). Assisi. pp. 162–163.
  31. Lurati, Patricia (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.54). Assisi. p. 164.
  32. Scheda Gotich Ivoires, gothicivories.courtauld.ac.uk.
  33. Utro, Umberto (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.58). Assisi. pp. 168–169.
  34. Utro, Umberto (1999). Museo del tesoro della basilica di San Francesco (Scheda n.59). Assisi. pp. 170–171.

Bibliography

External links

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