Giovanni Pisano (born: c. 1250 in Pisa, Italy – died: c. 1314
Siena, Italy of an unspecified cause), was an Italian Architect and Gothic
sculptor, and the son of Nicola Pisano. Together with Arnolfo del Cambio
and other pupils, he developed and extended into other parts of Italy the
renaissance of sculpture which in the main was clue to his father's talent.
After he had spent the first part of his life at home as a pupil and fellow
worker of Nicola, the younger Pisano was summoned between 1270 and 1274 to
Naples, where he worked for Charles of Anjou on the Castel Nuovo. One of his
earliest independent performances was the Campo Santo at Pisa, finished about
1283; along with this he executed various pieces of sculpture over the main
door and inside the cloister. The richest in design of all his works (finished
about 1286) is in the cathedral of Arezzo — a magnificent marble high
altar and reredos, adorned both in front and at the back with countless figures
and reliefs — mostly illustrative of the lives of St. Gregory and
St. Donato, whose bones are enshrined there. The actual execution of this was
probably wholly the work of his pupils. In 1290 Giovanni was appointed
architect or “capo maestro” of the new cathedral at Siena, in
which office he succeeded Lorenzo Maitani, who went to Orvieto to build the
less ambitious but equally magnificent duomo which had just been founded there.
The design of the gorgeous façade of that duomo has been attributed to him,
but it is more probable that he only carried out Maitani's design. At Perugia,
Giovanni built the church of St. Domenico in 1304, but little of the original
structure remains. The north transept, however, still contains his beautiful
tomb of Pope Benedict XI, with a sleeping figure of the pope, guarded by
angels who draw aside the curtain. One of Giovanni's most beautiful
architectural works was the little chapel of St. Maria della Spina (now
rebuilt, “restored”), on the banks of the Arno in Pisa; the
actual execution of this chapel, and the sculpture with which it is adorned,
was mostly the work of his pupils. The influence of his father Nicola is
seen strongly in all Giovanni's works, but especially in the pulpit of
St. Andrea at Pistoia, executed about 1300. Another pulpit, designed on the
same lines, was made by him for the nave of Pisa Cathedral between 1310 and
1311. The last part of Giovanni's life was spent at Prato, near Florence,
where with many pupils he worked at the cathedral until his death about 1330.
From October of 1916 through January of 1917, Rudolf Steiner gave a series
of nine lectures known as the Art Course. These lectures were given
the title of:
The History of Art.
Click here to discover what Steiner said about Giovanni Pisano in the
ninth lecture,
or in the entire
lecture series.