1433_in_art
1430s in art
Overview of the events of the 1430s in art
The decade of the 1430s in art involved some significant events.
Quick Facts List of years in art (table) ...
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- 1430: Sometimes considered end of Medieval art period in Italy.
- 1430s: Start of European printmaking as the engraver known as the Master of the Playing Cards becomes active in south-western Germany and Switzerland.
- 1435: Leon Battista Alberti writes Della Pittura.
- 1438-1440: Donatello completes his series of sculptures for the Cathedral of Prato.
- Masolino da Panicale, The Annunciation (1425–30)
- Jan van Eyck, Léal Souvenir (1432)
- Fra Angelico, Annunciation of Cortona (1432-4)
- Fra Angelico, The Annunciation (San Marco, Florence) (c.1437-1446)
- Jan van Eyck, Arnolfini portrait (1434)
- van der Weyden, The Annunciation (c.1435-1440)
Paintings
See also: Category:1430s paintings
- 1425–1430: Masolino da Panicale – The Annunciation (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)
- 1428–1432: Jan van Eyck (attrib.) – Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata (2 versions)
- c.1430
- Domenico di Bartolo – Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saint Peter and Saint Paul (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)
- Jan van Eyck (attrib.) – Portrait of a Man with a Blue Chaperon
- c.1430–1432
- Fra Angelico – The Annunciation (for Convent of San Domenico, Fiesole; now Museo del Prado, Madrid)
- Stefano di Giovanni – Madonna of the Snows Altarpiece (Uffizi, Florence)
- c.1430–1440: Jan van Eyck – Crucifixion and Last Judgement diptych (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
- 1432: Jan van Eyck
- 1432–1434: Fra Angelico – Annunciation of Cortona completed in Florence
- 1433:
- 1434: Jan van Eyck – Arnolfini portrait
- c.1434: Stefano di Giovanni
- Madonna of Humility with Saints (Triptych)
- San Domenico da Cortona Polyptych
- c.1434–1436: Jan van Eyck – The Annunciation (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.)
- c.1434–1446: Workshop of Rogier van der Weyden – The Annunciation (Musée du Louvre)
- 1435–1438: Rogier van der Weyden – The Magdalen Reading
- c.1435–1440: Rogier van der Weyden (attrib.) – Saint Luke Drawing the Virgin
- 1435: Stefano di Giovanni – The Journey of the Magi (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York)
- c.1435
- Jan van Eyck – Madonna of Chancellor Rolin
- Konrad Witz – Heilspiegel Altarpiece and St. Christopher
- 1436
- 1437: Domenico di Bartolo – Virgin and Child (Philadelphia Museum of Art)
- c.1437
- Stefano di Giovanni – Polyptych of St. Anthony the Abbot (Cortona)
- Jan van Eyck – Lucca Madonna
- c.1437-1438: Fra Angelico – Perugia Altarpiece
- c.1437-1444: Stefano di Giovanni
- Ecstasy of Saint Francis (Villa i Tatti, Settignano)
- Saint Francis Receiving Stigmata (National Gallery, London)
- c.1437-1446: Fra Angelico – The Annunciation (San Marco, Florence)
- 1438: Domenico di Bartolo – Polyptych of Santa Giuliana (Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria, Perugia)
- c.1438-1440: Jan van Eyck – Madonna in the Church
- 1439: Jan van Eyck – Portrait of Margareta van Eyck (Groeningemuseum)
Sculpture
- c.1425–1466: Donatello – David (bronze; Bargello, Florence)
- c. 1430 - Donatello - Dovizia (Mercato Vecchio lost)[1]
- 1431–1438: Luca della Robbia – Cantoria (carved singing loft, Florence Cathedral)
- c.1435: Lorenzo Ghiberti – Gates of Paradise (bronze panels; doors of Florence Baptistery)
- 1438: Donatello - St. John the Baptist (wood, Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari, Venice) [2]
- 1430: Michel Colombe – French sculptor (died 1513)
- 1430: Jean Colombe – French miniature painter and illuminator of manuscripts (died 1493)
- 1430: Desiderio da Settignano – Italian sculptor (died 1464)
- 1430: Vincenzo Foppa – Italian painter (died 1515)
- 1430: Matteo di Giovanni – Italian Renaissance artist from the Sienese School (died 1495)
- 1430: Francesco Laurana – Dalmatian-born sculptor and medallist (died 1502)
- 1430: Pier Antonio Mezzastris – Italian painter of the Umbrian school of painting (died 1506)
- 1430: Fra Diamante – Italian fresco painter (died 1498)
- 1430: Carlo Crivelli – Italian Renaissance painter of conservative Late Gothic decorative sensibility (died 1495)
- 1430: Antonello da Messina – Sicilian painter (died 1479)
- 1430: Hans Memling – Early Netherlandish painter (died 1494)
- 1430: Giovanni Bellini – Italian painter (died 1516)
- 1430: Simone Papa the Elder – Italian painter (died 1480)
- 1430: Cosimo Tura – Italian painter and one of the founders of the School of Ferrara (died 1495)
- 1430: Di Biagio Baldassarre del Firenze – Italian Renaissance painter of the Florentine School (died 1484)
- 1431: Shingei – Japanese painter and artist of the Muromachi period (died 1485)
- 1431: Andrea Mantegna – Italian Renaissance artist (died 1506)
- 1433: Felice Feliciano - Italian calligrapher, composer of alchemical sonnets and expert on Roman antiquity (died 1479)
- 1433: Marco Zoppo - Italian painter active mainly in Bologna (died 1498)
- 1434: Kanō Masanobu – Japanese chief painter of the Ashikaga shogunate and founder of the Kanō school of painting (died 1530)
- 1434: Tosa Mitsunobu – Japanese painter and founder of the Tosa school of painting (died 1525)
- 1434: Michael Wolgemut – German painter and printmaker (died 1519)
- 1435: Andrea del Verrocchio – influential Italian sculptor, goldsmith and painter working at the court of Lorenzo de' Medici in Florence (died 1488)
- 1435: Pietro Lombardo – Italian sculptor and architect (died 1515)
- 1435: Michael Pacher – Austrian Tyrolean painter and sculptor (died 1498)
- 1435: Andrea della Robbia – Italian sculptor, especially in ceramics (died 1525)
- 1435: Bartolomeo Sanvito – Paduan calligrapher (died 1518)
- 1435: Nicolas Froment – French painter (died 1486)
- 1435: Bernt Notke – German painter and sculptor (died 1508/1509)
- 1435: Giovanni Santi – Italian painter, poet and father of Raphael (died 1494)
- 1435: Jan Polack – Polish-born German painter (died 1519)
- 1435/1440: Bertoldo di Giovanni – Italian sculptor (died 1491)
- 1436: Baccio Baldini – Italian engraver in Florence (died 1487)
- 1436: Benvenuto di Giovanni – Italian artist, manuscripts (died 1509/1517)
- 1436: Sheikh Hamdullah – Ottoman master of Islamic calligraphy (died 1520)
- 1436: Ni Duan – Imperial Chinese painter of people and landscapes (died 1505)
- 1437: Simone Ferrucci – Italian sculptor (died 1493)
- 1438: Melozzo da Forlì – Italian fresco painter and member of the Forlì painting school (died 1494)
- 1439: Cosimo Rosselli – Italian painter of the Quattrocento, active mainly in Florence (died 1507)
- 1439: Domenico Rosselli – Italian sculptor (died 1498)
- 1439: Francesco di Giorgio – Italian painter of the Sienese School, sculptor, architect, art theorist and military engineer (died 1502)
- 1430: Andrei Rublev – the greatest medieval Russian painter of icons and frescos (born 1360-1370)
- 1430: Daniil Chyorny – Russian icon painter (born 1360)
- 1430: Madern Gerthener – German late Gothic stonemason, sculptor and architect (born 1360/1370)
- 1431: Li Zai – Chinese painter of landscapes and human figures during the Ming Dynasty (born unknown)
- 1435: Zhu Zhanji, Xuande Emperor – Emperor of China who was also a painter, especially of animals (born 1398)
- 1437: Pellegrino di Giovanni – Italian painter (born unknown)
- 1438: Jacopo della Quercia – Italian sculptor of the Italian Renaissance (born 1374)
- 1439: Jacobello del Fiore – Italian quattrocento painter (born 1370)
- Wilk, Sarah Blake (1986). "Donatello's "Dovizia" as an Image of Florentine Political Propaganda". Artibus et Historiae. 7 (14): 9–28. doi:10.2307/1483222. JSTOR 1483222.