2016.1.21 - detail
2016.1.21 - detail
Collection of the University of Pittsburgh Art Gallery, Pittsburgh, PA. Purchase of Miss Helen Clay Frick
2016.1.21

Saint Francis of Assisi Preaching to the Birds

circa 1911 – 1948 (Date created)

Pigment
Fresco
Paintings
135.75 in L x 98.25 in W (Image)
Russian;Italian
Painted after Giotto di Bondone's Saint Francis of Assisi Preaching to the Birds (1320s) from the Upper Church of San Francesco, Assisi.
Nicholas Lochoff (d. 1948)/ after/ St. Francis Master/ ST. FRANCIS OF ASSIS PREACHING TO THE BIRDS/ Original (1320s) in the Upper Church, San Francesco, Assisi/ Fresco/ The original of this fresco is one of a series on the life of St. Francis painted for the church where St. Francis is buried in Assisi. This scene shows the power over and love for wild animals that St. Francis was said to have. here, he delivers a sermon to the birds, In this reproduction, Lochoff shows the signs of age visible in the original. The background, painted with azurite, is shown with the signs of deterioration common in this material. At the bottom, the birds, done in tempera, have stayed on the ochre background, but have adhered badly in other places. The white lead in the paint of the rock at the lower right changed the paint from light to dark. Finally, Lochoff has duplicated the appearance of the hands which were painted on separate patches of plaster.

This fresco, so in the spirit of Saint Francis, is probably the most appealing of all the work at Assisi. Although there is much controversy concerning the frescoes of the Upper Church, evidence points to Giotto as the controlling spirit and to a date of about 1290 for their execution (Walter Read Hovey, The Nicholas Lochoff Cloister of The Henry Clay Frick Fine Arts Building, 1965).
In Collection
Purchased by Miss Helen Clay Frick for the University of Pittsburgh (1959-present)
Boris Lochoff (until 1959);By 1917 Lochoff had only finished and sent back to his home country 8 of these paintings. That same year there was a revolution in Russia. Lochoff was therefore stranded in Italy and cut off from the support previously provided by the Moscow Museum of Art. He was forced to sell the remaining paintings to other buyers. These buyers included Harvard University, the Portland Art Museum in Oregon, and the Frick Art Reference Library in New York. After Lochoff's death, Helen Clay Frick, the woman who started the Fine Arts Department at the University of Pittsburgh and donated the Frick Fine Arts building to the University, acquired this collection with the help of critic and connoisseur, Bernard Berenson. She then donated it to the University of Pittsburgh to adorn the walls of this cloister.
Mary Logan Berenson, "A Reconstructor of Old Masterpieces", The American Magazine of Art. (November 1930), pp. 628-638.

Zoa Grace Hawley, "New Life for Old Masters", The Christian Science Monitor, Weekly Magazine section. (October 31, 1934), pp. 8-9; ill. p. 8.

Zoe Grace Hawley, "New Life for Old Masters: Nicholas Lochoff - captures aura of antiquity in exact copies of Italy's fading treasures". (1934)

Edgar Peters Bowron, "European Paintings Before 1900 in the Fogg Art Museum". Harvard Art Museums. Cambridge, MA. (1990). pp. 131, not repr.

"[Unidentified article]". Fogg Art Museum Notes. Fogg Art Museum. Cambridge, MA. (February 12, 1921). p.6, repro. b/w.

"A Copy of Gozzoli's Masterpiece". The Harvard Crimson. Cambridge, MA. (February 12, 1921). p.6, repro. b/w.

Mary Logan Berenson. "Preserving the Old Masters by Copying", Transcript (December 31, 1930). p.5, reproduced b/w.

Mary Logan Berenson. "A Reconstructor of Old Masterpieces", The American Magazine of Art. (November 1930). pp. 628-638.

Royal Cortissoz. "Their Appeal to Lovers of our True Tradition". New York Herald Tribune. New York, NY. (March 15, 1931). p.8

Maurice Grosser. "Painter's Progress". C.N. Potter. New York, NY. (1971). Reproduced. p.32, fig. 10.

Edgar Peters Bowron. "European Paintings Before 1900 in the Fogg Art Museum". Harvard University Art Museums. Cambridge, MA. (1990). p.110.

Bill Homisak. "Fabulous Renaissance fakes at Frick offer faux fun". Tribune-Review. (August 27, 1989).

Jonathon Keats. "Forged: Why Fakes Are the Great Art of Our Age". Oxford University Press. (2013).
Please note that cataloging is ongoing and that some information may not be complete.

Italians
Renaissance
Cloisters
Architectural decorations and ornaments
Assisi
Saint Francis
Birds
Florence