Collections / Explore the Collection
Today at the Museum

September 9, 2010

Friends Lecture: "From Inside the Wyeth Family: Revered American Artists"

11 a.m. – Noon
Pillsbury Auditorium

Lecturer: Victoria Wyeth The Mary and Mark Fiterman Lecture Victoria Wyeth (granddaughter of Andrew Wyeth) will relate often surprising anecdotes about her family of artists as she discusses their works and the contexts in which they were created. ...

Six Tuscan Poets
Title:Six Tuscan Poets
Artist:Giorgio Vasari
Date:1544
Medium:Oil on panel
Dimensions:52 x 51 5/8 in. (132.08 x 131.13 cm) (canvas) 62 1/8 x 61 5/8 x 4 3/4 in. ...
Creation Place:Europe, Italy, Florence
Credit Line:The William Hood Dunwoody Fund
Accession Number:71.24
Location:G340
In this group portrait, six distinguished poets and philosophers of the 13th and 14th centuries are shown as if engaged in a literary conversation. Each was revered for his role in the development of lyric poetry, which helped establish the Tuscan dialect as the standard language in Italy. The seated figure is Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), author of the Divine Comedy. Facing him is Guido Cavalcanti (about 1255-1300), acclaimed for his love sonnets. The standing figure in clerical garb is the humanist and classical scholar Francesco Petrarch (1304-74); to his right is Giovanni Boccaccio (1313-75), author of the Decameron. The figures at the far left are two authoritative commentators on their works, the humanist and man of letters Marsilio Ficino (1433-1499) and the platonic philosopher Cristoforo Landino (1424-1498/1504). All four wear laurel wreaths, symbolic of literary achievement. The objects on the table represent various scholarly disciplines. The solar quadrant and celestial globe denote astronomy and astrology; the compass and terrestrial globe, geometry and geography; the books, grammar and rhetoric.