And now we see the singularity of the artist, wrists spread bare on mimed canvas, finally we see his consistency. Lazarus is dead on the first day. Gold background, rocky outcrop, sense of cluttered space. Do you see the decay? Can you sympathize, or do you notice?
I cannot sympathize with Duccio, I am too vain to admit his Maestá survives while my brain rots from alcohol. But I remember Duccio is at least fifty years old when his Maestá preeminently destroys my career as a visual artist. I do not mind.
Lazarus is dead on the second day. Duccio had many pupils, among them Simone Martini, whose Annunciation is a cropped rehash of Byzantine/Gothic flopped with Duccio's handy flair, a pious reverence and virtue. It sweeps and moves. Or attempts. Lazarus is no longer sleeping.
I have never been to the city of Florence, not now nor the 1300s, so I need not explain my lack of comprehension. Lazarus has risen now, but it is different than I remember. Lazarus is all alone, and Lazarus is alive, doomed to walk in mortal Hellfire a second time over.