Girolamo Muziano
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Girolamo Muziano (1532-1592), was an Italian Renaissance painter born in or near Brescia.
The accounts from the 16th to 20th centuries regarding Muziano's life said he was born in 1528 in Acquafredda and that began work under the tutelage of Romanino, an imitator of the Titian. Yet, a nearly autobiographical story of Muziano written by his confessor (unpublished until 1954) indicates instead that Muziano was born in Brescia, and left this town as a young man.
His first apprenticeship was under Domenico Campagnola and Lambert Sustris in Padua. He then spent time in Venice, but moved permanently to Rome about 1550. He was known there as Il giovane dei paesi (the young man of the landscapes), but although he continued to draw and paint landscapes throughout his career, he aspired instead to grand manner figure painting.
He painted historical painting in a style based largely on Michelangelo, giving great prominence to the monumental anatomy of his figures, even in works with ascetic saints as their subject. His Resurrection of Lazarus (1555) was painted for the Colonna palace in Subiaco. It established his fame; Michelangelo himself pronounced its author one of the "first artists of that age". The painting was later placed in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore above the artist's tomb; it was afterwards transferred to the Quirinal Palace, and now is in the Vatican Pinacoteca[1]. The painting returns to a spatial organization and narrative composition more typical of the High Renaissance than of Muziano's Mannerist contemporaries.
Muziano came to be the leading artist in Rome during the 1570-80s, painting in a style that appealed to Counter-Reformation patrons. He worked for Cardinal Ippolito II d'Este from 1560-66, although most of his landscape frescoes for the Cardinal's villas in Rome and Tivoli have since disappeared. His most important paintings include his Circumcision, formerly the high altarpiece in the church of the Gesu (although now removed to a corridor behind the sacristy), two chapels in Santa Maria in Aracoeli, and St Jerome preaching to Monks in the Desert in Santa Maria degli Angeli. This last painting was one of two altarpieces that Muziano painted for St. Peter's Basilica during the time when Muziano served as superintendent of works for Pope Gregory XIII. He also designed mosaics for Gregorian Chapel in the basilica, and was responsible for re-founding the Academy of St Luke (Accademia di San Luca)(painter's guild) in Rome (1577). He died in 1592, and was buried in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore.
[edit] Anthology of Works
[edit] References
- Freedberg, Sydney J. (1993). Pelican History of Art: Painting in Italy, 1500-1600, 344-345 Penguin Books Ltd.
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.