artist, if not in an academic way at least in the sense that he was curious about literary as well as visual ideas. He associated with scholars and other writers, and the results appear in his poetic and well researched art. Indeed, he was drawn to words during his whole lifetime, enjoying the study of Roman inscriptions and depicting Greek and Hebrew lettering in his works. His timely art found a ready following in Quattrocento Italy, and he drew support from contemporaries who favoured the revival of classical culture. Importantly, he had a ready affinity for allegory and historical accounts, and was able to follow literary programs and illustrate stories successfully, avoiding the awkwardness plaguing many Renaissance artists who based their art on detailed verbal programs. Mantegna bridged the gap between the written and the pictorial worlds.
4. St Mark, c. 1448–1449. Casein on canvas, 82 × 63.7 cm. Städelsches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt.
Finally, in seeking the source of his artistry in his personality, it is worth pointing out Mantegna was extraordinarily ambitious and he worked hard. His dedication to his craft and his physical energy led him to study, learn, and borrow ideas from other artists, whether from antiquity or from around the Europe of his time. He can hardly be called an eclectic artist, but he did absorb different styles and forge them together to create a distinct style of his own. Mantegna had the drive to get ahead and the will to create a striking artistic style which would catch the attention of his contemporaries. As it turns out, he had a teacher of note who himself was attracted to antiquity, and who imparted to his students progressive ideas.
The Renaissance period, with its ever-waxing secularism, presented a challenge to traditional Christian civilisation. Yet there was apparently no contradiction in Mantegna’s mind between Christian and secular thought. Most of Mantegna’s oeuvre consisted of sacred works, and in them he applied his keen observation of the natural world and his interest in pagan antiquity, the sculpture, architecture, clothing, and figural types of which fill his religious pictures as part of his historical approach. There were varying attitudes in fifteenth-century Italy, and some clerics and laymen too were puzzled as to why anyone would want a painting of Mars and Venus or would be vain enough to desire a self-portrait. Mantegna worked for a range of clients, and each had different expectations and needs. Some shunned the revival of classical culture and the expansion of the secular spirit, but for his part Mantegna moved freely from the sacred to the worldly. His liberal attitude won out, and by the end of Mantegna’s long life a peaceful coexistence held sway. A nearly seamless fusion of the sacred and profane came to form a chief aspect of Italian Renaissance culture.
In the following pages, we will look at Mantegna’s life and art. While only scattered documents exist for his earliest period, Mantegna’s mature years are better recorded, and we know more about him than any other Italian Renaissance artist before Leonardo da Vinci. We can trace his associations with patrons and public, friends and foes, teachers and colleagues in a way not possible with most other painters of the fifteenth century. We can explore the context of his artistry and establish the historical background and the nature of an art that has endured.
The Debut of a Prodigy: Mantegna’s Early years in Padua
5. Map of Italy, c. 1450. The University of Texas Libraries, Austin.
Andrea Mantegna lived during a time of social and cultural change in Italy. The continuity of institutions – government, church, family – masks the social and cultural changes which occurred in Italy over several centuries leading up to Mantegna’s time. By the Quattrocento, in place of static, agrarian society there had developed flourishing, urban economies based on trade and small manufacturing. Fifteenth-century Italy had become evermore dominated by bankers, manufacturers, traders and lawyers rather than landholders. A dynamic social structure resulted from this shift toward mercantile, city life, leading to more head-to-head competition between individuals and families, and one had to get along in a constantly changing world which promised few people automatic status or continued prosperity. This shift was readily apparent in larger urban centres such as Florence and Venice, but was also felt in smaller cities and city-states where political control remained held by a single family, who had to operate in the framework of a dynamic balance of political power and had to survive in a fragmented world.
This competitive and changing atmosphere gave rise to a new, pragmatic attitude among Italians. People came more and more to observe, measure, describe, and admire the world around them; a new culture took root based increasingly on science, commerce, and exploration. Indeed, this worldly attitude would lead to the discovery of new lands and peoples in Africa, Asia, and the Americas. The nineteenth-century historian Jacob Burckhardt aptly called the Renaissance the era of the “rediscovery of the world and of man.” This entailed broad intellectual changes, and affected all aspects of the sciences and the humanities. Italians became more keenly interested in what we would call psychology, analysis of family life and societal roles, and an incipient fascination with anthropological issues. There was even a new realistic approach taken in the social science of political philosophy; we recognise the pragmatic and sometimes cynical advice on statecraft of Niccolò Machiavelli as a sign of the times, a tough-minded response to the vicissitudes of ever-changing fortune. The new naturalism encompassed a growing focus on the personal experience, and this gave rise to a new kind of individualism. Renaissance literature, letters, and other records indicate a level of self-reflection and self-consciousness not seen since antiquity.
Fifteenth-century artists such as Mantegna responded to the growing interest in the real world with an increasing naturalism in their paintings and sculpture. The development of convincing perspective, the representation of cityscape and landscape views, and the growth of portraiture all progressed during the fifteenth century. Many painters consciously sought to imitate Nature, although some artists still indulged in unnatural effects and fantastic idealism in their art. Mantegna belonged to a group of artists known among contemporaries for their striking realism.
In addition to this ever-increasing engagement with material existence, another major aspect of the new, comprehensive investigation of the secular world was the rediscovery of antiquity, especially ancient Roman civilisation, which had left in Italy so many monuments and surviving literary texts in its wake. There developed an almost obsessive preoccupation in early Quattrocento Italy with all things classical: statues, poetry, inscriptions, and coins were collected, treasured, and studied, and ancient buildings were admired as never before since the time of the collapse of the Roman Empire nearly a thousand years before. These two focal points of Renaissance culture – a fascination with the real world (both human and natural) and a powerful attraction to classical art and civilisation – formed the central focal points of Andrea Mantegna’s art.
During the Middle Ages there remained only a lukewarm interest in the visual arts of Greek and Roman antiquity. Ancient Roman art was only known to a minor extent even in Italy, and there was little inclination to excavate the remains of a fallen, pagan civilisation. An incident that occurred in the central Italian city of Siena in the 1340s will serve to indicate the ambivalent attitude held toward the classical past in medieval Italy. A marble statue of the Roman goddess Venus was unearthed by chance and was placed in the central square of the city. The public was interested at first, and at least one painter even drew copies of it. But after a while the Sienese became worried, and some claimed it would bring disaster on the city if they continued to pay attention to this nude, heathen idol. The Sienese, who were at war with the Florentines at the time, smashed the sculpture into bits and crossed over one night into Florentine territory to bury the fragments, believing their enemies would come to suffer misfortune just by having these pieces in their lands!
This superstitious attitude changed rapidly in the early years of the fifteenth century. How different it was in the year of Mantegna’s death when the Laocoön was rediscovered near Rome. This ancient Greek sculpture, representing a high priest of Troy and his sons being strangled by a serpent sent by a punishing god, was universally admired when it was dug out of the ground in 1506. It was brought to the city in a grand parade as flowers were strewn in its path and church bells tolled, despite the pagan subject matter and the nudity of the figures. The Italian people had come to worship all things classical, and Mantegna – with his vividly