Pope Urban VI and the Anti-Pope Clement VII

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Pope Urban VI and the Anti-Pope Clement VII

Creator

Master of the Getty Froissart

Flemish Illuminator · 1475–1485

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The anonymous artist known as the Master of the Getty Froissart has only recently been defined as a distinct artistic personality. The artist's name derives from the illuminations that enliven a copy of a text written by Jean Froissart now held by the J. Paul Getty Museum. A subtle handling of light, space, and color characterizes the artist's miniatures. Light-filled interiors reveal a persistent

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Date
about 1480–1483
Medium
Tempera colors, gold leaf, gold paint, and ink
Culture
Flemish
Department
Manuscripts
Institution
Getty Museum

Although Jean Froissart focused mainly on political maneuverings and battles in his Chronicle, he also wrote about the problems experienced by the papacy. This image illustrates the confusing situation brought about by the Great Schism, which began in 1378 with the election of different popes by two opposing groups of cardinals. Early in 1378, a group of primarily Italian cardinals elected Urban VI as pope. Later that same year, an opposing group of French cardinals elected Clement VII as pope, and he established the seat of his papacy in Avignon, France. In this image, Urban VI sits at the right, and Clement VII sits at the left, flanked by his supporters. King Charles V of France, who accepted the validity of Clement's election, stands at the far left wearing robes bearing fleurs-de-lis, the French royal insignia. The artist indicated the hostility between the groups by depicting figures from the opposing parties back-to-back instead of facing one another.

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