Perugino in Spello
The magnificent medieval Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Spello, renowned for the “Cappella Bella” (Beautiful Chapel), also known as the Baglioni Chapel and entirely frescoed by Pinturicchio between 1500 and 1501, houses two late-period works by Pietro Vannucci, celebrated as “the divine painter”. On the two pillars flanking the apse, visitors can admire the Pietà with Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Mary Magdalene on the left, and the Madonna with Child accompanied by Saint Catherine of Alexandria and Saint Blaise on the right.
These works were commissioned on March 8, 1521, by some canons of the collegiate church in Spello to decorate the two chapels beside the main altar. In 1644, architect Belardino da Como, who oversaw the expansion and restoration of the church, decided to remove both chapels while preserving the back wall with Vannucci's frescoes, ensuring that they remained in the exact place where they were conceived and created.
The painter, already advanced in age at the time (he would pass away two years later, in 1523), completed the commissions promptly within the following two months.