Domenico del Barbieri

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Monument for the heart of  Henry II. The  Three Graces were sculpted by Germain Pilon and the base by Domenico del Barbieri. The urn is a nineteenth-century restoration.
Monument for the heart of Henry II. The Three Graces were sculpted by Germain Pilon and the base by Domenico del Barbieri. The urn is a nineteenth-century restoration.

Domenico del Barbieri (c. 1506 - c. 1570) was a Florentine artist of the Renaissance period, also referred to as Domenico del Barbiere, Domenico Fiorentino, and, in France, Dominique Florentin. He settled and married at Troyes in France between 1530 and 1533. He joined the studio of Italian artists who worked with Primaticcio and Rosso Fiorentino at Fontainebleau and Meudon. He worked both on the stucco-work and frescoes. He was also an engraver. In 1541, he returned to Troyes, where he enjoyed success as a sculptor for churches. His style of sculpture was influenced, particularly in the heads and the drapery, by Andrea Sansovino, and shows Mannerist characteristics. His Charity, at St. Pantaléon in Troyes, suggests that del Barbieri was aware of the contrapposto style of Michelangelo. His relief work for the tomb of Claude, Duke of Guise (d. 1550), reveals the possible influence of Rosso and of Francesco Salviati.[1] Vasari noted del Barbieri in his writings. Under the direction of Primaticcio, del Barbieri executed the base for the monument for the heart of Henry II of France, the figures for which were sculpted by Germain Pilon. Pilon may have been influenced in the flowing drapery of the figures of the Three Graces by del Barbieri's work.[2] The monument was del Barbieri's last known commission.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Blunt, 82–83.
  2. ^ Blunt, 94.

[edit] References

  • Blunt, Anthony. Art and Architecture in France: 1500–1700. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press, [1957] 1999 edition. ISBN 0300077483.
  • Farquhar, Maria (1855). in Ralph Nicholson Wornum: Biographical catalogue of the principal Italian painters. Woodfall & Kinder, Angel Court, Skinner Street, London; Digitized by Googlebooks from Oxford University copy on Jun 27, 2006, page 16.