Portinari Chapel
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The Portinari Chapel (Italian: ''Cappella Portinari'') is a Renaissance art, Renaissance chapel at the Basilica of Sant'Eustorgio, Milan, northern Italy. Commenced in 1460 and completed in 1468, it was commissioned by Pigello Portinari as a private sepulchre and to house a silver shrine given by Archbishop Giovanni Visconti (archbishop of Milan), Giovanni Visconti in 1340 containing the relic head of St. Peter of Verona, to whom the chapel is consecrated.‘Cappella Portinari’
Basilica di Sant’Eustorgio (official site).
The architect is unknown, the traditional attribution to Michelozzo having been succeeded with equal uncertainty by attributions to either Filarete or Guiniforte Solari, architect of the apses of the Certosa di Pavia and the church of San Pietro in Gessate in Milan.


The commission

The Portinari Chapel, which has been described as a work of Tuscan architecture in Lombardy, was commissioned by the Florence, Florentine nobleman Pigello Portinari (1421–1468), who became the representative in Milan of the Medici bank in 1452.''Milano''
Guida d'Italia del Touring club italiano, 10th edn (Milan: Touring Editore, 1998), pp. 370–372.
(His younger brother Tommaso Portinari, Tommaso, also a Medici banker and Patrons of the arts, patron, would commission the Portinari altarpiece from Hugo van der Goes in 1475.) The building was intended to function both as a family chapel and mortuary and to house the relics of Saint Peter of Verona who, as patron saint of inquisitors, was of particular importance to the Dominican Order, Dominicans of Sant’Eustorgio: their convent had housed the Milan inquisition since the 1230s.Michael M. Tavuzzi
''Renaissance inquisitors: Dominican inquisitors and inquisitorial districts in Northern Italy, 1474-1527''
(Leiden: Brill, 2007), p. 58.
Above the chapel’s altar a donor portrait from 1462, sometimes attributed to Giovanni da Vaprio, depicts Pigello Portinari kneeling in prayer before Peter of Verona. This image may be the origin of the legend that Peter appeared in a vision to Pigello, commanding him to build a chapel in which his remains might be honourably preserved. Pigello Portinari was interred here in 1468, but the saint’s head remained in the sacristy and his tomb was not moved into the chapel until 1737.


Description

The chapel is located at the eastern end of the Basilica of Sant'Eustorgio. From the exterior it is a compact cubic brick building with a lower-roofed, projecting square apse. The main body of the chapel is surmounted by a dome with sloping tiled roof supporting a high lantern, framed by four turrets. The dome of the apse is protected by an octagonal structure, again capped with a tiled roof. Internally the chapel has architectural features that bear similarity to the Sagrestia Vecchia by Filippo Brunelleschi. The interior spaces are defined by architectural orders, pilasters, architraves, mouldings, pendentives and a ribbed dome with all the details picked out in grey stone that contrasts with the flat plaster surfaces. These architectonic features are in places richly ornamented with formal motifs in relief. A number of the surfaces have been painted in fresco in the Lombardy manner by Vincenzo Foppa. In the pendentives supporting the dome are tondo (art), tondi with the Doctors of the Church while on the side walls are four ''Scenes from the life of St. Peter of Verona''. Above the arch which marks the entrance to the apse is an ''Annunciation'' and, facing it above the arch which forms the entrance to the chapel, an ''Assumption of the Virgin''. The frescos were rediscovered in 1878 and restored at the beginning of the twentieth century.‘San Lorenzo and Sant'Eustorgio’
virtualtoursit.com.
In 1736 the elaborate marble sepulchre of Peter of Verona, commissioned in 1336 from Giovanni di Balduccio (a pupil of Giovanni Pisano), was moved from the basilica into the Portinari Chapel and placed at the back of the apse; the following year a marble altar was erected in front of it, on which was placed the silver shrine containing the saint’s head. In the 1880s the sepulchre, which had been hidden away awkwardly behind the altar, was moved into the main body of the chapel and placed somewhat off-centre, where it would be well lit by the lateral windows, and where it still stands. The head, however, is today conserved in a small adjacent chapel.Beltrami, pp. 30–31.‘Sant'Eustorgio’
Time Out Milan
The Chapel also includes a number of paintings by anonymous Lombard artists, including frescoes such as the ''Miracolo della nuvola e Miracolo della falsa Madonna'', and a depiction of the martyrdom of St Peter Martyr.


See also

* History of medieval Arabic and Western European domes * History of Italian Renaissance domes * History of early modern period domes


References


Further reading

*Edith Wharton, ''Italian Backgrounds'' (London: Macmillan, 1905), pp. 164–6, provides a designer’s response to the chapel as it was at the start of the twentieth century.
preview of this section
from a 2009 reprint, is available from Google Books.


External links

{{Authority control 15th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Italy Roman Catholic churches completed in 1468 Roman Catholic churches in Milan Renaissance architecture in Milan Tourist attractions in Milan