Girolamo Savoldo

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The Mourning of Christ, ca. 1513–20, oil on wood, Kunsthistorisches Museum

Girolamo Savoldo, also called Girolamo da Brescia (c. 1480-1485 after 1548) was an Italian High Renaissance painter active mostly in Venice. He is noted for his subtle use of color and chiaroscuro.

Biography

Savoldo was born in Brescia, but little is known about his early years. Some sources claim he was known as Girolamo Bresciano.[1] By 1506 he was in Parma, and by 1508 he had joined the Florentine painter’s guild. In this period he finished the Rest at the Flight from Egypt (Augsburg), the Elijah Harassed by a Crow (National Gallery of Art, Washington), and a Deposition.

In 1515 he painted the Portrait of a Clad Warrior, traditionally identified with Gaston of Foix. Also from the same period is the Torment of St. Anthony. In this work, which is in the Timken Museum of Art, Savoldo shows St. Anthony with his hands clasped in prayer, fleeing from a hellish vision into a daylight, pastoral landscape. Like other northern Italian painters of the time, Savoldo was interested in Flemish painting, particularly the nightmarish monsters of the Flemish artist Hieronymus Bosch, which influenced his depiction of the tormentors in this work. As the saint flees, his hands point to a monastery, a reminder that he was the father of the monasticism movement. These works were appreciated by the commissioners from Venice, where Savoldo relocated before 1521.[2]

On June 15, 1524, he signed a contract for an altarpiece for the church of San Domenico in Pesaro (now in the Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan). In 1527, he completed a St. Hieronymus for the Brescian family Averoldi, probably the one at National Gallery of London. From the 1530s dates a Nativity at the National Gallery in Washington DC, which seems influenced by the lambent painting of the same subject by his contemporary, Correggio. In 1533 Savoldo painted a Madonna with Four Saints in the church of Santa Maria in Organo (in Verona), while in 1537–38 he executed the altarpiece for the main altar of Santa Croce, Brescia (destroyed during World War II). From 1540 are the two Nativity paintings for the church of San Giobbe of Venice and the church of San Barnaba of Brescia, as well as the famous Magdalen painting.

Savoldo's students in Venice included Paolo Pino. Savoldo may have spent some years of his life in Milan, and is known to have made paintings for the Milanese duke Francesco II Sforza in 1534.[3] Savoldo had a Dutch wife. The exact date of his death is not known: in 1548 he was cited as still living in Venice, though vecchione ("Very old"). After his death, he was almost entirely forgotten for three centuries. A rediscovery of his oeuvre began in the mid-nineteenth century; art historian Creighton Gilbert says Savoldo was "one of the last artists to be raised to the ranks of the major High Renaissance masters".[4]

Overview

Mary Magdalene, ca. 1535–40. oil on canvas, London, National Gallery
Saint Matthew and the Angel, 1534, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Savoldo's paintings show eclectic influences, and combine Venetian coloration with Lombard modeling to obtain a quiet lyricism. He appears to be influenced by Titian and Lorenzo Lotto and, in his preoccupation with clearly defined shapes in light, by Cima da Conegliano and Flemish painters. Among artists of his time, he was unusual in his marked preference for compositions showing a single figure, or few figures in a quiet setting.[4] His corpus of works is not large, comprising about 40 paintings and ten drawings.[4]

Savoldo was noted during his lifetime for his mastery of nocturnal effects.[3] His Saint Matthew and the Angel (1534; Metropolitan Museum of Art), which Andrea Bayer has called "one of the most evocative nocturnal scenes in Italian painting",[3] prefigures Caravaggio's famous painting in the Contarelli Chapel in Rome, with a luminescent gown standing in contrast to the dark background.

His Mary Magdalene (ca. 1535–40; London, National Gallery), one of several versions Savoldo painted of this subject, is a masterpiece of lighting effects. The Magdalene is shrouded in a white satin mantle that covers her head, leaving her face in shadow, with the silvery expanse of drapery relieved by the merest glimpse of a red sleeve.

Selected works

References

  1. Cristiani 1807, p. 186
  2. Bayer & Metropolitan Museum of Art (2005), p. 32
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Bayer & Metropolitan Museum of Art (2005), p. 33
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Gilbert

Sources

External links

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