Skip to main content
The birth of humanism

LOUISE BOURDUA introduces the emotional and narrative religious art of 14th-century Siena that broke with Byzantine formalism and laid the foundations for the Renaissance

(L) Lando di Pietro, Head of Christ (fragment of crucifix), 1338; (R) Ambrogio Lorenzetti Madonna del Latte (Madonna of the Milk), about 1325 / Pics: © Foto Studio Lensini Siena

Siena: The Rise of Painting, 1300-1350
National Gallery, London
★★★★★

 

THE NATIONAL GALLERY’s take on the most exciting 50 years of Siena’s artistic production is a remarkable achievement: a pleasure for the eye and commendable for its ability to make medieval religious art accessible.

Take out shares in the People's Press
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
(L) Three Studies of Isabel Rawsthorne 1967; (R) Self-Portra
Exhibition review / 16 January 2025
16 January 2025
RINA ARYA confronts the brutal operation of Francis Bacon’s approach to portraiture
A panel from the Palestinian History Tapestry
Exhibition Review / 1 October 2024
1 October 2024
MARJORIE MAYO recommends an exhibition that asserts Palestinian history, culture and creativity in the face of strategies to erase them
(L) Vincent Van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1889; (R) The Large Pla
Exhibition review / 26 September 2024
26 September 2024
CHRISTINE LINDEY identifies the socialist impulse and sympathy with working people that underlies the artistic mission and inspired work of Vincent Van Gogh
TEACHING MATERIALS: pages from Michal Rosen and Jeff Perks's
Exhibition preview / 28 June 2024
28 June 2024
JOHN GREEN applauds the clarity with which an upcoming exhibition and book make plain Britain's role in the slave trade