Gherardo Silvani

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Gherardo Silvani (1579 - 1675) was an Italian architect and sculptor, active mainly in Florence and other sites in Tuscany during the Baroque period.

His son Pierfrancesco also became an architect. He worked on the Palazzo Corsini al Prato, Palazzo Capponi-Covoni (1623), Palazzo Fenzi (1634), Palazzo Pallavicini, Palazzo di San Clemente. He also help design and construct the altar of the Basilica di Santo Spirito. He helped in the reconstruction of the churches of San Frediano, Santi Simone e Giuda, Sant'Agostino, and the Chiesa di Santa Maria Maggiore (Florence), among others. He helped design the facade of the Basilica of Santa Maria at Impruneta. His model for the facade of the cathedral of Florence was not adopted.

His masterpiece remains the church and facade of San Gaetano (built 1604-1648) in front of Piazza Antinori in Florence. The work was commissioned by the Cardinal Carlo de Medici, and dedicated to the founder of the Theatine order. The building work was shared with Matteo Nigetti. The church is also known as the Church of San Michele and San Gaetano, because it was built at the site of a Romanesque church of San Michele Bertelde. The second chapel on the left contains a Martyrdom of San Lorenzo by Pietro da Cortona. The right transept holds Matteo Rosselli's Chapel of the Nativity with a bronze crucifix by Giovanni Francesco Susini, and is considered his finest sculpture. The facade's sculptural decorations is highly atypical for Florentine churches, which had a predilection for iconoclastic geometrically ornamented facades.

[edit] References

  • Wittkower, Rudolf (1993). "Art and Architecture Italy, 1600-1750", Pelican History of Art, 1980, Penguin Books Ltd, p301-303. 
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