(ANSA) - ROME, MARCH 05 - Patient work to compose a puzzle that returns the grandeur of a precious work, dismembered for almost two centuries. The altarpiece of San Francesco al Pratodi Perugia thus regains its original charm thanks to parts from Germany and the Netherlands, from the Capodimonte museum in Naples, from Assisi and Gubbio. Rebuilt with the 13 elements that make up the main nucleus kept by the National Gallery of Umbria, Taddeodi Bartolo's masterpiece is the highlight of the first great monograph that Perugia dedicates to the master of the polyptych between the end of the fourteenth century and the first decades of the fifteenth century. One hundred panels selected by the curator Gail Solberg, his most accredited scholar, from 7 March to 20 June will recount the grandeur of the Sienese also thanks to loans from prestigious international museums such as the Louvre in Paris and the Szépművészeti Múzeumdi Budapest, and with the collaboration of Italian institutions and institutes . Presented in streaming to the press today, the exhibition - the organizers reassure - will open to the public guaranteeing visitors the safety space indicated by the decree just issued by the government for the fight against alcoronavirus. (HANDLE).
Taddeo Di Bartolo, giant of the polyptych
2020-03-05T15:40:39.183Z
Patient work to compose a puzzle that returns the greatness of a precious work, dismembered for almost two centuries. (HANDLE)