Luca Cancellari
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Luca Cancellari (Luke Cangellaris; Greek: Λουκάς Καγκελλάρης) is a Byzantine icon painter posited in some modern Greek encyclopaedias to have lived during the 12th century in Constantinople, where he painted some of the best icons of Virgin Mary.[1][2][3]
These works ascribe him the creation of icons like:
- the Madonna Nicopeia in St Mark's Basilica, that ended up in Venice after the conquest of Constantinople by the Crusaders in 1204,
- the Madonna di San Luca in the namesake Sanctuary, transferred in Bologna in 1160 and bearing the inscription Opus Lucae Cancellari, or as read by Antonio Masini (1599–1691) Cancellarii,[4]
- the Madonna Salus Populi Romani in the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome
- and other with Greek inscriptions of that period.
Giovanni Lami, who strongly opposed that Saint Luke the Evangelist was a painter, thought that the icon of Madonna di San Luca was executed by a certain Luca Santo, a Florentin painter of the 14th century.[5][6] He alleged that Luca Santo was the son of a nominated Cancelliere and considered improbable the claim that this icon was brought from Constantinople.[7]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]Sources
[edit]- Pietro Zani, Enciclopedia Metodica Critico-Ragionata delle Arte, Parma 1817-28 (in Italian)
- Eleftheroudakis Encyclopedia, Athens 1929 (in Greek)
- Helios Newest Encyclopedia, Athens 1977 (in Greek)
- Haris Patsis New Grand Hellenic Encyclopedia, Athens 1980 (in Greek)
- Miklós Boskovits, A Corpus of Florentine Painting - The Origins of Florentine Painting 1100–1270, Florence 1994
- Bruce Cole, Studies in the history of Italian art 1250–1550, New York 1996