Collection: Puccio di Simone and Allegretto Nuzi

Fourteenth-century masters of Florentine devotion and gilded sacred narrative

Active during the mid-fourteenth century, the collaboration between Florentine painter Puccio di Simone and Umbrian master Allegretto Nuzi represents a sophisticated dialogue between regional Italian styles. Their joint endeavors synthesized the monumental, spatial clarity of the Giottesque tradition with the lyrical, decorative refinement of the Sienese school, defining the devotional aesthetic of the late medieval period.

Characterized by exquisite punchwork, rich tempera pigments, and a masterful application of gold leaf, their shared hand produced sacred narratives of profound solemnity. The figures are rendered with a quiet, sculptural dignity, enveloped in intricately patterned drapery that reflects the high textile culture of the era.

Today, their surviving panels stand as sublime testaments to the spiritual and material rigor of the Trecento. These works transcend mere iconography, offering a contemplative experience rooted in the harmonious balance of flat ornamentation and emerging humanistic depth.