Giovanni Battista Caccini

Bust of Cosimo I de' Medici by Giovanni Caccini, Royal Castle in Warsaw.

Giovanni Battista Caccini (24 October 1556 — 13 March 1613) was an Italian sculptor from Florence, who worked in a classicising style in the later phase of Mannerism.

He was born at Montopoli in Val d'Arno between Florence and Pisa; his training was with the sculptor-architect Giovanni Antonio Dosio, known for his accurate drawings of Roman antiquities, and Caccini's numerous interpretive restorations of Roman sculptural fragments gave him the reputation of being a knowledgeable antiquarian, while the inescapable influence of Giambologna and his circle can be seen in Caccini's bronze statuettes.[1] Caccini was in close cooperation with Pietro Tacca and the rest of Giambologna's pupils in the prolonged cooperation over the bronze doors for the Pisa cathedral.

Fragmentary antiquities were not to the sixteenth-century collectors' taste. Caccini produced a head for an antique torso, and a further, crouching figure to produce the Bacchus and Ampelos in the Uffizi, which was once attributed to Michelangelo.[2] He restored a fragmentary Apollo Sauroctonos as an Apollo with the Lyre (Uffizi). He could also improvise on antique themes: the biographer of artists Rafaello Borghini reported in 1730 that "In truth he was highly skilled in diligently putting together pieces, and counterfeiting, the Antique."[3]

His garden sculptures produced the bold silhouettes and copious attributes that the genre requires. As an architect, his one notable work is the portico of the Santissima Annunziata, Florence (1601).

Caccini died at Rome in 1613.

Selected works

Notes

  1. Martin Weinberger, "Bronze Statuettes by Giovanni Caccini" The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 58 No. 338 (May 1931), pp. 230-233+235. (A Bacchus and Ceres in the Musée Jacquemart-André, Paris; an ex-Medici Bacchus in the Bargello)
  2. The group was recognized as Caccini's by Alois Grünwald, "Uber einige unechte Werke Michelangelo's," Münchner Jahrbuch der bildenden Kunst (1910) p. 11ff.
  3. Borghini, Il Riposo (Florence 1730), "E di vero molto vale nel commeter con diligenza pezzi insieme, e contrafar, l'antico". Martin Weiberger illuminated this aspect of Caccini's working career in "A sixteenth-century restorer", The Art Bulletin 27 (1945), pp 266-69.
  4. C. Caneva, The Boboli Gardens 1982, p. 42, no. 38.; attributed in Louis Alexander Waldman, "A Case of Mistaken Identity: The Martellini Jupiter by Giovanni di Scherano Fancelli" The Burlington Magazine 140 No. 1149 (December 1998, pp. 788-798) p. 789.