The murals comprise twelve scenes from the life of
St. John the Baptist and form a narrative that begins to the right of the entrance. The first scene is the
Annunciation to Zachary (1523), followed by
The Visitation (1524), then
The Birth of the Baptist (1526),
The Blessing of the Young St. John (1519),
Meeting of Jesus and the Young St. John the Baptist in the Desert (1518),
The Baptism of the Christ (ca. 1509-1510),
The Baptist Preaching to the Crowds (1515),
The Baptism of the Crowds (1517), ''St. John's Capture
(1517), The Dance of Salome
(1522), The Beheading of St. John the Baptist
(1523), and The Presentation of the Head of St. John the Baptist'' (1523). The date of each scene does not follow the narrative sequence. The cycle also includes four figures representing Christian virtues into
tromp l'oeil niches to look like sculptures:
Faith (ca. 1523) and
Hope (1523), flank the entrance and carry the Latin inscription "
Laudate Dominum in trio sancto eius" ("Praise the Lord in His holy place"), while
Charity (ca. 1513) and
Justice (1515) flank the former passage way into the chapel with another Latin phrase, "
Introbibo in Domum Tuam" ("I shall enter your household"). The narrative scheme is framed by pilasters and cornices decorated with patterns. Such pictorial elements blend with the architecture of the cloister. The main artist here is
Andrea del Sarto (Florence, 1486-1530), whose portrait can be admired in the plaster bust placed over the entrance by Domenico Geri (1724). Andrea was one of the greatest painters of his time and was called by the biographer
Giorgio Vasari in his 1568 edition of
Lives "a most excellent artist", "without error". Andrea worked in all media - drawings, oil paint and fresco - and received altar piece commissions as well as devotional scenes, portraits as well as mythological subjects. Although he created his own style, he was influenced by Flemish and German prints (e.g.
Albrecht Dürer and
Lucas van Leyden), antique sculpture, particularly
Hellenistic, the great masters of Florentine figurative art (
Masaccio,
Ghiberti and
Ghirlandaio) and the high renaissance style of his contemporaries such as Michelangelo and Raphael. As in other cases, del Sarto called for the collaboration of fellow artist
Francesco di Cristofano, known as Il Franciabigio (Florence, 1424 - ca. 1525), who shared a workshop with him. In the two scenes at the Scalzo by Franciabigio,
The Blessing of the Young St. John in the Desert and
The Meeting of Jesus and the Young St. John in the Desert, a less formal and more intimate atmosphere is achieved. Paintings by both these artists are housed in the major state museums in Florence - the Palatine Gallery in
Pitti Palace, the
Uffizi Gallery, the Museum of Andrea del Sartio's
Last Supper at San Salvi, and the
Accademia. Other major fresco cycles can be admired at
Santissima Annunziata, the in Medici villa at
Poggio a Caiano and at San Salvi. The frescoes were removed using the strappo technique by Leonetto Tintori between February, 1963 and July, 1968. They were exhibited 1968-69 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Rijks museum in Amsterdam, and the Hayward Gallery in London. == Iconography ==