Giovanni Francesco Rustici

Giovanni Francesco Rustici (1474–1554) was an Italian Renaissance painter[1] and sculptor.

He was born into a noble family of Florence, with an independent income. Rustici profited from study of the Medici sculpture in the garden at San Marco, and Vasari said that Lorenzo de' Medici placed him in the studio of Verrocchio,[2] and that after Verrocchio's departure for Venice, he placed himself with Leonardo da Vinci, who had also trained in Verocchio's workshop. He shared lodgings with Leonardo while he was working on the bronze figures for the Baptistry, for which he was ill paid and resolved, according to Vasari, not to work again on a public commission. At this time, Pomponius Gauricus, in De sculptura (1504), named him one of the principal sculptors of Tuscany, the peer of Benedetto da Maiano, Andrea Sansovino and Michelangelo.

Vasari tells of the elaborate suppers given by Rustici and his comrades.

Rustici's Mercury was commissioned by Cardinal Giuliano de' Medici in 1515 as a fountain figure for the courtyard of Palazzo Medici in Florence. The figure blew a jet of water that spun a whirligig with four vanes in the form of butterfly wings, according to Giorgio Vasari's description.[3] According to James Draper, Rustici's figure drew inspiration from the mid-fifteenth century gilt-bronze fountain Winged Infant now at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[4] Vasari praised the sculpture, now in the Boscawen collection at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.[5]

At the time of the siege of Florence, 1528, he went to France, where he was pensioned by King Francis I but after the king's death died in poverty at Tours.

Baccio Bandinelli apprenticed with Rustici.

Some glazed terracotta bas-reliefs in the technique familiar from the della Robbia workshops, are attributed to Rustici, notably a Madonna and Child in the Bargello and a Saint John the Baptist in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Major works

Bibliography

References

Notes

  1. ^ No paintings securely attributed to him survive.
  2. ^ Other sculptors from Verrocchio's atelier included Francesco di Simone and Agnolo di Polo.
  3. ^ Vasari, Vita of Giovanni Francesaco Rustici.
  4. ^ The connection to Rustici's Mercury of this figure by a sculptor "close to Donatello" was made by James David Draper, Notable Acquisitions (Metropolitan Museum of Art), No. 1983/1984 (1983-84), pp. 26-44
  5. ^ [1]Press release; the sculpture was illustrated on the cover of The Burlington Magazine 139 No. 1137 (December 1997).
  6. ^ Attributed to Leonardo by John Pope-Hennessy, in Victoria and Albert Museum Yearbook 4.

External links