Niccolò di Pietro Gerini worked in Florence, Prato and Pisa. He often collaborated with other painters, and is recorded as having designed the San Pier Maggiore altarpiece made by Jacopo di Cione and his workshop.
Niccolò's skill at architectural design may have been the basis of his collaborations. His own paintings are harder to identify: it is not certain that the 'Baptism of Christ' is by him. His style, where identifiable, is accomplished.
Niccolò di Pietro Gerini
documented 1368; died probably 1415, certainly by 1427
Paintings by Niccolò di Pietro Gerini
(Showing 6 of 7 works)
This altarpiece is the earliest known example that shows the baptism of Christ as the central image – in large multi-panelled altarpieces it was usually the Virgin and Child.It was made for a chapel in Santa Maria degli Angeli, the Camaldolese monastery in Florence. The chapel was dedicated to th...
Not on display
This roundel (round panel) comes from the frame of the central panel of a multi-panelled altarpiece with an image of the baptism of Christ at the centre. It shows an angel, fingertips touched together gently in prayer.This is the only surviving frame decoration from the altarpiece but there may h...
Not on display
This is the right-hand panel of the main tier of an altarpiece showing the baptism of Christ. Saint Paul is shown holding a large sword, which appears black because the silver leaf used for the blade has darkened over time.The saint has bare feet, expressing his simplicity and humility, but he st...
Not on display
This is Saint Peter, recognisable by the colour of his robes – he is traditionally shown wearing yellow and blue – and by the large golden key he holds. It is the key to the kingdom of heaven, which was promised to him by Christ (Matthew 16: 19).The saint’s bare feet express his simplicity and hu...
Not on display
This is the lowest part (the predella) of an altarpiece that depicts Saint John the Baptist in its central panel, baptising Christ in the river Jordan. At either end of the predella are two standing saints: Saint Benedict on the left and Saint Romuald on the right.The scene on the left shows the...
Not on display
It is rare to see images of the baptism of Christ at the centre of altarpieces and this is quite possibly the first example where it takes this position in Italian painting.Christ stands in the centre of the river Jordan, naked but for a transparent loin cloth. He gazes directly at us, making a b...
Not on display
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