On Saturday, we published the first set of photos from Nicola’s visit earlier this summer to the abbey of Sant’Antimo in Tuscany, showing the church's exterior, so today we continue with the interior. As I mentioned in the previous post, the exterior of the church is decorated with a number of sculptures of animals (zoomorphs), which represent the dangers of the world, while sculpted capitals of the interior are most decorated with vegetable motifs (phytomorphs), to represent the Church as a garden and a place of refuge. This is particularly notable within the central nave.
The church contains one storied capital, the second from the back on the right side, which represents the story of Daniel in the Lion’s Den. Daniel in the center, surrounded by lions, raises his hands in a gesture very similar to that of the priest at Mass during the Our Father; the angel, immediately to the right, is the deacon, and the prophet Habakkuk, holding his basket of food under a veil, is the subdeacon holding the paten. The anonymous Romanesque sculptor who did this capital in the second half of the 12th century is known as the Master of Cabestany, so called from a small town near Perpignan, France, where he did a particularly beautiful sculpted tympanum over the door of one of the churches. Well over 100 pieces have been attributed to him and his workshop, in a wide range of places throughout southern France and northern Spain. The presence of three of his pieces in Tuscany suggests that he may have traveled as a pilgrim to Rome, and financed the trip by doing sculptures at various stops along the way. In his time, Sant’Antimo was a very rich and important territorial abbey which governed a large tract of Tuscany, fully able to pay him a good price for his work, as well as a popular stop for pilgrims on the via Francigena.Like many churches of the Romanesque period, the building was designed with pilgrims in mind, creating an itinerary for them to follow which went up the north aisle, through the ambulatory (behind the main sanctuary), to the crypt under the main altar, down the south aisle, and into the nave. Some zoomorphs are therefore also included in the interior, especially on the north side, which represents the dangerous world through which the pilgrim journeys to reach the garden of the church. Here we see bears...
Almost nothing remains of the frescos which certainly would have covered most of the walls, apart from this pair of images of the martyr Sebastian and a sainted Pope, possibly Fabian, with whom he traditionally shares his feast day on January 20th. This is in the ambulatory, which also contains a pair of side chapels.
A view of the upper gallery; the part of this gallery at the back of the church on the right (above the capital of the Master of Cabestany) was closed up and converted into apartments after the abbey was suppressed in the mid-15th century, and its property given to the diocese of Pienza. The bishops of Pienza used these apartments as a hunting lodge, and since the church was given over to secular use, it was never updated stylistically.
A beautiful shot of the abbey seen from the nearby village of Castelnuovo dell’ Abbate.