Andrea Bolgi | |
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Born | 1605 Carrara |
Died | 1656 (aged 50–51) Naples |
Field | Sculpture |
Training | Florence |
Movement | Baroque |
Works | St Helena, St. Peter's Basilica |
Patrons | Pope Urban VIII Pope Innocent X Giovan Camillo Cacace |
Influenced by | Gian Lorenzo Bernini |
Andrea Bolgi (1605–1656) was an Italian sculptor responsible for several statues in St. Peter's Basilica, Rome. Towards the end of his life he moved to Naples, where he sculpted portrait busts.
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Bolgi was born in the marble-working city of Carrara.[1] His training was in Florence, which was a conservative center in the seventeenth century.
In 1626 he went to Rome, where he quickly entered the circle of sculptors who were employed on occasion by Gian Lorenzo Bernini[2] and were influenced by Bernini's Baroque style. From 1626, before the expansion of Bernini's atélier, Bolgi supplanted Giuliano Finelli (1601–1653) as the "only man of consequence" in Bernini's studio, Rudolph Wittkower observed, in attributing to Bolgi the Bust of Thomas Baker begun by Bernini, now at the Victoria and Albert Museum.[3]
Bolgi created his Saint Helena (1629–1639) for one of the niches at the crossing of St. Peter's Basilica, one of the choice commissions of his generation, for which he had doubtless been promoted by Bernini in preference to Finelli.[4] Bolgi laboured for a decade on the figure that has epitomised his career, in some degree to his detraction: Wittkower remarked on its "classicizing coolness, its boring precision",[5] and its position directly across from Bernini's masterful Saint Longinus invited unflattering comparisons.[6]
Between 1647 and 1650 all the spandrel spaces above the arches of the nave of St. Peters were filled with stucco figures. Their execution was divided among sculptors with connections with Bernini, who seems to have exercised loose control over the compositions. In the first bay on the left, the spandrel figures of The Church and Divine Justice were given to Bolgi, who was paid for them in September 1647 and in March 1648. Pope Innocent X was dissatisfied with Bolgi's figures, which were taken down, adjusted to everyone's satisfaction, and reinstalled [7]
After 1650 Bolgi moved to Naples, where he was noted for his portrait busts.[8] He was called to Naples by Giovan Camillo Cacace, a lawyer and member of the Accademia degli Oziosi. For this client Bolgi created two sculptures in the Cacace Family chapel in San Lorenzo Maggiore. The kneeling figures are Giuseppe and Vittoria De Caro. Iconographically they derive from the scheme of the Fabrizio Pignatelli statue by Michelangelo Naccherino. The movement and whirling of the cloths is a clear step forward in the development of the baroque language, until then not known to the Neapolitan public. Beneath the sculptures are busts of Francesco De Caro and Giovan Camillo Cacace. The latter is renowned for its vivid portrayal of the client.