Navicella (mosaic)

The 1628 full-size copy in oil in the Vatican
Drawing of the lost mosaic by Parri Spinelli, about 1420, once owned by Vasari.[1]

The Navicella (literally "little ship") of Old Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome, was a large and famous mosaic that occupied a large part of the wall above the entrance arcade, facing the main facade of the basilica across the courtyard, attributed to Giotto di Bondone around 1305–1313. It depicted the version from the Gospel of Matthew (Matthew 14:24–32) of Christ walking on the water, the only one of the three gospel accounts where Saint Peter is summoned to join him.[2] It was almost entirely destroyed during the construction of the new Saint Peter's Basilica in the 17th century, but fragments were preserved from the sides of the composition, and what is effectively a new work, incorporating some original fragments, was restored to a position at the centre of the portico of the new building in 1675.[3]

The mosaic, designed to be seen from a distance, was extremely large. A full-scale copy in oil, commissioned by the Vatican from Francesco Berretta in 1628, after much of the work had already been lost round the edges, measures 7.4 by 9.9 metres (24 ft × 32 ft).[4] The full mosaic was probably about 9.4 by 13 metres (31 ft × 43 ft), with an inscription in Latin verse running below the image.[5]

Description

The mosaic was commissioned by Cardinal Jacopo Stefaneschi, whose donor portrait was to the right of Christ's feet; he was in charge of Rome after Pope Clement V and the Curia left the city in March 1309 at the beginning of the period of the Avignon Papacy.[6] The commission was connected with the Holy Year of 1300, and used to be dated closer to that but is now usually regarded as having been produced after a visit by Giotto to Rome in about 1310, in which he is presumed to have created a cartoon for specialist mosaic-workers to follow. The mosaic probably replaced a Late Antique one in the same location, but nothing is known about this.[7] According to Stefaneschi's obituary of 1347, the work cost 2,200 florins.[8] The earliest references to the work as by Giotto are in a Vatican necrology entry for Cardinal Stefaneschi recording his death in 1343, and then the Latin chronicle of Giotto's home city Florence written in the late 14th century by Filippo Villani.[9]

It was rectangular, and positioned so that those leaving the basilica saw it across the courtyard outside the church, and passed under it if they left by the main route.[10] A figure of a man fishing on the shore to the left was thought to be a self-portrait of Giotto, as Vasari's Life records. The composition was dominated by the fishing boat with its large sail, which represented a metaphor of the "Ship of the Church", whose "captain" on earth was Saint Peter and his successors as Pope.[11] It was commissioned at a very difficult time for the Papacy, who were unable even to control the gangsterish nobility of Rome, and had therefore left the city, but the image promised that both church and Papacy were, with the help of Christ, "unsinkable".[12] Of the eleven figures still in the boat, it has been suggested that the one holding the tiller is (anachronistically in terms of the Gospels) Saint Paul.[13] In the sky, two almost naked classical style "wind god" figures blow through horns or funnels, one from each side, below pairs of haloed male figures. Giotto would have produced drawings for specialist mosaic workers to recreate on the wall; whether he had any further involvement as the work was created is unknown.

The subject is depicted elsewhere in medieval art of the period, and later works like frescos in the "Spanish Chapel" of Santa Maria Novella in Florence, and in the Brancacci Chapel by Masaccio (or perhaps his colleague Masolino), and one of the bronze relief panels on Ghiberti's north doors of the Florence Baptistery.[14] It was also used on Papal coins and medals, though usually with Peter in the boat, often as the only figure.[15] It was the only modern (post-classical) work described in Alberti's De Pictura.[16] Such a large depiction of a maritime scene was unprecedented in marine art, at least since classical times.

The arcade across the courtyard and its mosaic was at first unaffected by the protracted and complicated rebuilding of the main basilica, but in the 17th century the mosaic underwent a complicated series of four moves and restorations or remodellings in 1610, 1618, 1629 and 1674/75 which finally took it to its present size, condition and location above the main door inside the portico of the new church.[17]

Fragments

Only two bust-length figures of angels in roundels survive from the original;[18] one remains in the Vatican, while the other was given to the church of San Pietro Ispano in Boville Ernica in 1610, when the mosaic was first removed from its original place. The former is considerably restored (in 1924, 1950 and 1975–80), and was discovered underneath later work in 1911 (or 1924), while the Boville Ernica fragment seems to be in good original condition. Despite none of the copies of the original including these figures it is thought they were part of the original, probably in a border.[19] There are thought to be some patches of original work remaining in the mosaic still in St Peter's, which is now semi-circular with a straight bottom edge to fit into a lunette. Areas where original work seems to survive are in "the gilded edge of the ship, the sail blown by the wind, various sections of some apostles".[20]

Fragment in Boville Ernica 
Fragment in the Vatican, before restoration 
Fragment in the Vatican, after restoration 

Style

The style of the work can now only be judged from the two angel fragments, restored as they are. Vasari's description emphasized the varied reactions of the figures in the boat as they saw Peter sinking below the waves, and the patient expression on the face of the fisherman on the shore, who, like Pieter Bruegel's ploughman in Landscape with the Fall of Icarus seems to ignore the dramatic scene on the water in concentrating on his own task. But, as Svetlana Alpers has shown, these were the terms in which Vasari tended to describe large history paintings he admired, though Alberti's description also "treats ...[the work] as a psychological narrative".[21]

Modern scholars, working from the fragments, emphasize the influence of the major Roman artist of the day, Pietro Cavallini, who was also patronized by Cardinal Stefanesci, and of the Late Antique and Early Medieval works to be seen in Rome. According to John White: "The relatively schematic, linear quality of much late-thirteenth- and early-fourteenth-century work is wholly absent. The impressionistic technique and range of colour both derive from the fifth century. It is impossible to say how much this technique reflects the ideas of Giotto himself and how much those of the skilled mosaicists working under him. The two heads are, however, closely related both to the work of Cavallini, whose art still dominated the Roman scene, and to the basic type of physiognomy developed on the walls of the Arena Chapel."[22]

Copies

There are a number of records of the original design in drawings and prints—at least 17 are recorded. The earliest are a number of drawings attributed to the Florentine artist Parri Spinelli (c. 1387–1453), of which the most detailed is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and others are in Chantilly, Cleveland, Ohio and Bayonne. However, the variations between these, and other drawings by Spinelli of surviving works, show that he was in the habit of making rather loose interpretations of works that he recorded in drawings.[23] Most later copies date from after parts of the mosaic were already lost, and none form a complete record of the full design. Some prints, like an engraving by Nicolas Beatrizet of about 1559, are reversed (mirror-image) copies.[24]

Gospel account

Only in the account in Matthew 14:24–33 does Peter also leave the boat to walk on the waves:

But the boat was now in the midst of the sea, distressed by the waves; for the wind was contrary.

And in the fourth watch of the night he came unto them, walking upon the sea. And when the disciples saw him walking on the sea, they were troubled, saying, It is a ghost; and they cried out for fear. But straightway Jesus spake unto them, saying Be of good cheer; it is I; be not afraid. And Peter answered him and said, Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee upon the waters. And he said, Come. And Peter went down from the boat, and walked upon the waters to come to Jesus. But when he saw the wind, he was afraid; and beginning to sink, he cried out, saying, Lord, save me. And immediately Jesus stretched forth his hand, and took hold of him, and saith unto him, O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt? And when they were gone up into the boat, the wind ceased.

And they that were in the boat worshipped him, saying, Of a truth thou art the Son of God.

Vision of St Catherine of Siena

On the evening of January 29, 1380, at the time of Vespers, Saint Catherine of Siena, who had been contemplating the mosaic for some hours, suddenly felt as if "the ship had fallen off and landed on her shoulders" with "unbearable weight". She apparently never walked again, and died three months later.[25]

Notes

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Navicella mosaic.
  1. Parri Spinelli, "Free Copy of Giotto's Navicella", Metropolitan Museum of Art
  2. Accounts of the miracle appear in three Gospels: Matthew 14:22–33, Mark 6:45–52 and John 6:16–21.
  3. "St Peter's"; Lubbock, 158; Tomei, 31; Nicholls, 162; Present image, from Bridgeman Art Library
  4. WGA
  5. Calvesi, 34; Tomei, 30
  6. Papacy, 7; Paoletti & Radke, 65
  7. White, 332; Tomei, 30
  8. Tomei, 30
  9. Murray, 77
  10. Calvesi, 34; Later print of the original location
  11. St Peter's
  12. Calvesi, 36; Paoletti & Radke, 65
  13. Nicholls, 164, reporting Köhren-Jansen, 1993
  14. Lubbock, 158–160
  15. Nicholls, 163; Examples from www.coinarchives.com
  16. Alpers, 199; Lubbock, 158
  17. See Kleinhenz 749, Capresi 36, Tomei, 31, though none give a coherent account of the process.
  18. Tomei, 31; Moioli et al., 244
  19. Papacy, 6–7; Tomei, 31; Moioli et al., who give the date of discovery of the Vatican fragment as 1924, and the dates of subsequent work
  20. Vatican
  21. Alpers, 190–192, 199 (quoted); Lubbock, 158 quotes from Alberti
  22. White, 332 (quoted); see also Calvesi, 40, and Paoletti & Radke, 65
  23. Bean, no. 2 (New York); Dunbar, 104–110 (Cleveland)
  24. image on flickr of the Beatrizet; Unreversed print of 1567, by Mario Labacco, from Budapest.
  25. Papetros, 4

References

Further reading

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