Portrait of the devil seen in Giotto fresco
Portrait of the devil seen in Giotto fresco
A smirking horned devil can be seen in the frescoed clouds of a Giotto work in the famed Assisi basilica, an Italian art historian said.
The discovery was reported in the online edition of this month's issue of the Franciscan religious order publication San Francesco Patrono d'Italia.
Art historian Chiara Frugoni said she has spent almost 30 years studying the cycle of frescoes in the upper level of the Umbrian landmark church, butonly recently spotted the image in what appears to be an empty space in a cloud.
The frescoes in Assisi of central Italian province of Perugia are by Giotto, a Fiorentine whose narrative style and human-like figurative style marked an evolution in art in the late 13th century.
In a telephone interview with The Associated Press, Frugoni said she chanced on the image of the devil while trying to more precisely date a fresco depicting the death of St. Francis of Assisi.
She has since concluded it was painted in 1289.
"It's very visible," she said, adding that the image had not previously come to attention because no one had been looking for it.
Frugoni described the detail to the publication as a "vigorous portrait of a devil with two dark horns" cleverly hidden in the swirling clouds near an angel, and said that the significance of its placement needs to be studied.
The Rev. Enzo Fortunato, a friar with the order, said that in medieval times it was commonly believed that at death two figures go into action an angel to accompany the just into heaven; a devil to bring the damned into the depths of hell.
Fortunato said that by hiding the devil in the clouds, Giotto appears to have beaten by nearly two centuries a technique attributed to Andrea Mante! gna - wh o in one painting shows a knight emerging from a cloud.
A strong earthquake in 1997 heavily damaged the basilica, and restorers took years to complete the restoration on some of the Cimabue and Giotto frescoes. AP
Published Nov 14, 2011
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