Lunette  

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-[[Luca Signorelli's work in Orvieto]]+In architecture, a '''lunette''' (French ''lunette,'' "little moon" and also "glasses") is a half-moon shaped space, either masonry or void. A lunette is formed when a horizontal [[cornice (architecture)|cornice]] transects a round-headed [[arch]] at the level of the imposts, where the arch springs. If a door is set within a round-headed arch, the space within the arch above the door, masonry or glass, is a lunette. If the door is a major access, and the lunette above is massive and deeply set, it may be called a ''[[Tympanum (architecture)|tympanum]]''.
-[[Resurrection of the Flesh]], [[Luca Signorelli]]+
-1499-1502, Fresco+
-Signorelli went to [[Orvieto]], and produced his masterpiece, the frescoes in the chapel of S. Brizio (then called the Cappella Nuova), in the [[Duomo di Orvieto|cathedral]]. 
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-The Cappella Nuova already contained images in the vaulting over the altar by [[Fra Angelico]], who had begun the murals fifty years earlier. The works of Signorelli in the vaults and on the upper walls represent the events surrounding the Apocalypse and the Last Judgment. The events of the Apocalypse fill the space which surrounds the entrance into the large chapel. 
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-The events begin with the ''Preaching of Antichrist'', and proceed to the ''Doomsday'' and ''[[The Resurrection of the Flesh]].'' They occupy three vast [[lunette]]s, each of them a single continuous narrative composition. In one of them, [[Antichrist]], after his portents and impious glories, falls headlong from the sky, crashing down into an innumerable crowd of men and women. 
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-The events of the Last Judgment fill the facing vault and the walls around the altar: ''Paradise'', the ''Elect and the Condemned'', ''Hell'', the ''Resurrection of the Dead'', and the ''Destruction of the Reprobate.'' 
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-To Angelico's ceiling, which contained the Judging Christ and the Prophets led by John the Baptist, Signorelli added the Madonna leading the Apostles, the Patriarchs, Doctors of the Church, Martyrs, and Virgins. The unifying factor of the paintings is found in the scripture readings in the Roman liturgies for the Feast of All Saints and Advent. 
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-Stylistically, the daring and terrible inventions, with their powerful treatment of the nude and arduous foreshortenings, were striking in its day. [[Michelangelo]] is claimed to have borrowed, in his own fresco at the [[Sistine Chapel]] wall, some of Signorelli's figures or combinations. The decoration of the lower walls, unprecedented in the history of art, are richly decorated with a great deal of subsidiary work connected with [[Dante Alighieri|Dante]], specifically the first eleven books of his Purgatorio, and with the poets and legends of antiquity. A Pietà composition in a niche in the lower wall contains explicit references to two important Orvietan martyr saints, S. Pietro Parenzo and S. Faustino, in the centuries preceding the execution of the lunette paintings. 
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-The contract for Signorelli's work is still on record in the archives of the Cathedral of Orvieto. He undertook on [[April 5]], [[1499]] to complete the ceiling for 200 ducats, and to paint the walls for 600, along with lodging, and in every month two measures of wine and two quarters of corn. The contract directed Signorelli to consult the Masters of the Sacred Page for theological matters. This is the first such recorded instance of an artist receiving theological advice, although art historians believe the two groups routinely discussed such matters. Signorelli's first stay in Orvieto lasted not more than two years. In 1502 he returned to Cortona. He returned to Orvieto and continued the lower walls. He painted a dead Christ, with Mary Magdalen and the Virgin Mary and the martyrs local Saints Pietro Parenzo and Faustino.The figure of the dead Christ, according to Vasari, is the image of Signorelli's son Antonio, who died from the plague during the course of the execution of the paintings. 
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In architecture, a lunette (French lunette, "little moon" and also "glasses") is a half-moon shaped space, either masonry or void. A lunette is formed when a horizontal cornice transects a round-headed arch at the level of the imposts, where the arch springs. If a door is set within a round-headed arch, the space within the arch above the door, masonry or glass, is a lunette. If the door is a major access, and the lunette above is massive and deeply set, it may be called a tympanum.




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