Guido Mazzoni (sculptor)
Guido Mazzoni (c. 1445 – 1518, active 1473-1518) was an Italian sculptor and painter[1] of the Renaissance period, working in Bologna, Naples and France.
Biography
Guido Mazzoni was born in Modena and first became active in that city, ruled at the time by the Este family of Ferrara. A case has been made for his early training in the studio of Francesco Cossa.[2] His earliest recorded work appears in 1473, when he made theatrical masks and props for the Duke of Ferrara's wedding. He is known to have continued such ephemera of court life throughout his career, but is most famous for his ultra-realistic terracotta sculpture.
Mazzoni's best known works are a Lamentation (Compianto)[3] now in the Church of Gesù, Ferrara, and another in the church of Sant'Anna dei Lombardi in Naples. These realistic lifesize figures are modelled in polychromed terracotta, for native stone was lacking in Modena; both represent emotive mourners gathered around the dead Christ, in which each character is a portrait of either the donor or a relative of the donor; in the Modena Lamentation, for instance, Ercole I d'Este represents Nicodemus and his wife Eleonor represents Mary of Cleophas. In the Neapolitan piece, Alfonso II is Joseph of Arimathea. It seems probable that Mazzoni's background in theatrical masks and props affected his work, because of the staged melodrama in their gestures and expressions. One attractive theory is that they relate to an annual passion play, in which these notable figures may have played some part.
In the more prestigious artistic centre of Florence the Della Robbia family became famous for their distinctive blue and white tin-glazed terracotta work, which was highly skilfully made yet provided relatively cheap decoration. Most closely related to the work of Mazzoni, however, is that of Niccolò dell'Arca, who operated in Bologna. He also made scenes of the lamentation, but his show an expressionist style, as the figures display an exaggerated sense of movement and drama. Mazzoni's figures are far more realistic and their movements and gestures are more restrained.
Mazzoni's work was well respected by his contemporaries, and he was granted tax exemption in 1481. He soon attracted the attention of the outside world, when in 1489 he was asked by the aforementioned Alfonso of Aragon, brother-in law to Ercole, to carry out some work in Naples. There Charles VIII of France was so taken with Guido's work during his successful military intervention in Naples that in 1495 Guido became one of the first Italian artists to move to the court of Charles VIII of France, where he was the best paid[4] also knighted.[5] Guido was entrusted with the kneeling lifesize figure of the king and accompanying angels[6] for Charles VIII's tomb at the royal abbey of St-Denis, destroyed during the French Revolution.[7] The French court became increasingly keen on Italian artists and afterwards began luring many more. Guido and his French workshop have been recognized with more and less certainty in other furnereal works of personages connected with the court: the figures of Philippe de Commines, historian of Charles' expedition, and his wife, Hélène de Chambes, removed from the Grands-Augustins to the Louvre Museum reveal Mazzoni's dramatic realism through a workshop execution;[8] the Dormition of the Virgin for the Abbaie de la Trinité, Fécamp, is attributed to Mazzoni with the aid of his studio;[9]
In 1509 a document records a payment to Mazzoni for sculpted medallions all'antique for the Château de Gaillon, built by Cardinal Georges d'Amboise, the faithful friend and councillor of Louis XII of France. Timothy Verdon notes[10] the close relations of the abbot at Fécamp and the archbishop of Rouen, who was charged with the funeral arrangements for Charles VII, and suggests a further attribution, of a Pietà with four lifesize figures that was formerly in the embrasure behind the altar in the abbot's chapel of the Hôtel de Cluny, Paris; the ensemble was commissioned by the brother of the Cardinal d'Amboise, Jacques d'Amboise, abbot of Cluny. The sculptural group was described in the 18th century by Jean-Aymar Piganiol de La Force, "d'une bonne main et très bien dessinées pour le temps"Description historique de la ville de Paris vol. vi (1765) pp 306f, but were destroyed at the Revolution; there remain only the subsidiary early 16th-century painted images of Mary of Cleophas and Mary Salomé, which Verdon suggests are by Mazzoni.
Guido Mazzoni is thus a much overlooked artist of the period. His art is beautifully crafted and stunningly realistic in its psychological portrayals, and he was sought after by some of the most powerful men of his age. This lack of interest in him can only be put down to the fact that he operated outside of the great centres of Florence, Venice and Rome. He was however a highly skilled and complex artist whose work not only has the power to move but is also full of symbolism. His medium of terracotta is similarly overlooked but it was easier to work with and thus produced a far more realistic finish than bronze or marble. Furthermore, as Alison Cole points out in her study of the Italian Renaissance Courts,[11] it had a biblical symbolism as 'men are "no more than mortal clay"'. It is therefore possible to conclude that Mazzoni was a highly important artist of his period, both in terms of the skill of his art and the historical significance of his life.
Notes
- ↑ The earliest documentary references, of 1472 call Mazzoni depentore, working, probably in fresco, in the Duomo of Modena, and in the late phase of his career he is peintre et imagier du Roy (Timothy Verdon, "Guido Mazzoni in Francia: nuovi contributi" Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz 34.1/2 (1990:139-164) p. 149).
- ↑ Timothy Verdon, The Art of Guido Mazzoni, New York, 1978.
- ↑ Originally for the church of Santa Maria della Rosa in Modena.
- ↑ Timothy Verdon, "Guido Mazzoni in Francia: nuovi contributi", Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz 34.1/2 (1990), pp. 139-164.
- ↑ Verdon 1978, pp 122ff, 272-76.
- ↑ The kneeling angels carried the armorials of Charles' four claimed kingdoms: France, Naples Sicily and Jerusalem.
- ↑ Its appearance can be reconstructed from engravings and the description of André Félibien (Verdon 1990, figs. 2 and 3).
- ↑ Verdon 1990, p. 141.
- ↑ Verdon 1990, p. 141f and fig. 4; Verdon notes documents which reveal that before the Revolution there were two further groups at Fécamp, with comparable subjects, a Lamentation of Christ and a Death of Saint Benedict.
- ↑ Verdon 1990, pp. 142ff.
- ↑ Cole, Alison. Art of the Italian Renaissance Courts.
References
- Olson, Roberta J. M. Italian Renaissance Sculpture.
External links
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