Page:Vasari - Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, volume 2.djvu/234

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lives of the artists.

any of such size that had then been seen.[1] He afterwards painted a Crucifix with Sant’ Antonino, on canvas, which was placed in the chapel of that saint in the church of San Marco.[2] In the palace of the Signoria of Florence, this master depicted a San Griovanni Batista, at the Porta della Catena;[3] and in the Medici Palace he painted three pictures for Lorenzo the elder, each containing a figure of Hercules, five braccia high. In the first is seen the hero strangling Ant®us; the figure of Hercules is very fine, and the force employed by him in crushing his antagonist is clearly apparent, every muscle and nerve of the body being strained to ensure the destruction of his opponent. The teeth, firmly set, are in perfect accord with the expression of the other parts of the figure, all of which, even to the points of the feet on which he raises himself, give manifest intimation of the efforts used. Nor is less care displayed in the figure of Antaeus, who, pressed by the arms of Hercules, is seen to be sinking and deprived of all power of resistance, his mouth is open, he is breathing his last sigh. In the second figure, Hercules is killing the Lion; he presses the left knee against the chest of the animal, whose jaws he has seized with both hands; grinding his teeth and extending his arms, he tears the mouth open and rives the creature asunder by main force, although the lion defends himself with his claws and is fiercely tearing the arm of his assailant. The third picture, in which the hero is destroying the Hydra, is indeed an admirable work, more especially as regards the reptile, the colouring of which has so much animation and truth, that nothing more life-like could possibly be seen; the venomous nature, the fire, the ferocity, and the rage of the monster are so effectually displayed, that the master merits the highest encomiums, and deserves to be imitated in this respect by all good artists.[4]

  1. This figure which, according to Baldinucci, Michael Angelo copied as a study several times, is now lost,—Ed. Flor. 1832.
  2. The chapel was rebuilt by John of Bologna, and the picture is believed to be now in the Borghese Palace, or in some villa of that family.— Masselli.
  3. Of this work no intelligence can be obtained.— Ibid.
  4. The three pictures here described are lost; but Pollaiuolo would seem to have repeated the subject, although in smaller dimensions, since there are two precious pictures by his hand in the Gallery of the Ufiizj; the