Santa Maria della Pietà in Telusiano, Monte San Giusto


Santa Maria della Pietà in Telusiano is a Renaissance-style Roman Catholic church located on Via Tolomei in Monte San Giusto, province of Macerata, in the region of Marche, Italy.

History

A church at the site existed since the 15th century, it underwent reconstruction began in 1513, and it was reconsecrated in 1529 under the patronage of the bishop of Chiusi, Nicolò Bonafede. The Bishop's coat of arms is above the portal, and the architrave reads: N.BOFIDES EPISCOPVS CLUSINUS FVNDITVS RESTAVRAVIT.
The small church has elegant classical lines with Doric pilasters lining a single nave. A small dome just before the presbytery has neoclassical frescoes depicting the four evangelists in the spandrels. The walls still retain some of the 16th-century frescoed lunettes attributed to one of Lotto's students, Durante Nobili of Caldarola, and a late 17th-century copy of the Madonna of Trapani by Nino Pisano; and under the main altar, a 15th-century Northern European Vesperbild.
However, the most prominent feature of the church, and the most commonly visited tourist attraction in the town, is the main altarpiece: a Crucifixion by Lorenzo Lotto. The work was commissioned by Bishop Bonafede for the church, painted mainly in Venice, and completed in situ in the present frame circa 1534. Lotto was paid 100 gold florins and a quantity of olivo oil. The signature on the painting was not discovered until 1831.
The scene depicts three levels: