Monday, February 24, 2020

Artist of the day, February 24, 2020: Giulio Romano, an Italian painter, designer, and architect (#925)

Giulio Romano (1499–1546). Italian painter and architect, he was one of the major figures of the late Renaissance. Called Giulio Pippi or Giuliano Giannuzzi, he was born in Rome, became the pupil of Raphael, and trained amidst the High Renaissance reverence for Classical antiquities. He designed the Palazzo Maccarani, Piazza Sant'Eustachio, Rome (c.1520–4), where his originality was demonstrated in the ambiguous capital-less pilasters and the windows that rest uneasily on a string-course.

Giulio was apprenticed to Raphael as a child and had become so important in the workshop that by Raphael’s death, in 1520, he was named with G. Penni as one of the master’s chief heirs; he also became his principal artistic executor. After Raphael’s death, Giulio completed a number of his master’s unfinished works, including the Transfiguration. In his original work from these years, such as the Madonna and Saints

In 1524 Giulio left Rome for Mantua, where he remained until his death, completely dominating the artistic affairs of that duchy. The most important of all his works is the Palazzo del Te, on the outskirts of Mantua, begun in 1525 or 1526 and built and decorated entirely by him and his pupils. This palace is almost a parody of the serene classicism of Donato Bramante while retaining the forms of Roman antiquity. The building consists of a square block around a central court with a garden opening off at right angles to the main axis—in itself characteristic of the way in which all the elements are slightly different from what would be expected. The design is particularly famous for its capricious misuse of ancient Greek and Roman ornamental motifs.
Advertisement

The principal rooms of the Palazzo del Te are the Sala di Psiche, with erotic frescoes of the loves of the gods; the Sala dei Cavalli, with life-size portraits of some of the Gonzaga horses; and the fantastic Sala dei Giganti. This showpiece of trompe l’oeil (illusionistic) decoration is painted from floor to ceiling with a continuous scene of the giants attempting to storm Olympus and being repulsed by the gods. On the ceiling, Jupiter hurls his thunderbolts, and the spectator is made to feel that he, like the giants, is crushed by the mountains that topple onto him, writhing in the burning wreckage. Even the fireplace was incorporated into the decoration, and the flames had a part to play. This room was completed by 1534, with much help from Rinaldo Mantovano, Giulio’s principal assistant. The color is very crude; the subject is suited to facile virtuosity and tends to bring out the streak of cruelty and obscenity that runs just below the surface in much of Giulio’s painting.

In Mantua itself, he did a great deal of work in the huge Reggia dei Gonzaga. The decorations of the Sala di Troia are particularly noteworthy in that they look forward to the illusionistic ceiling decorations of the Baroque; this style was probably inspired by the presence in Mantua of the Camera Degli Sposi by Andrea Mantegna. Giulio also built for himself a Mannerist version of the House of Raphael (1544–46) and began the rebuilding of the cathedral (1545 onward).



1536, Tiziano Vecellio Ritratto di Giulio Romano, Mantova
1505-25, Coronation of the Virgin (Madonna of Monteluce)
1516, The Holy Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist
1517-19, The Virgin and Child
1518, Portrait of Doña Isabel de Requesens
1518, St. John the Baptist in the Wilderness
1518, Study for the Holy Family
1519-20, Head of a Hermaphrodite
1520, Donna Alla Toletta
1520, La Circoncision
1522-24, The Madonna and Child with St. John the Baptist
1523, Madonna & Child
1523, Virgin and Child with the Infant St John
1523-25, Polyphemus
1524, Design for an Ornamental Saltcellar
1525, The Lovers
1526, The Old Woman and Vulcan, Tribute to Apollo
1526-28, Psyche Appealing in Vain to Juno
1526-28, Venus and Mars Bathing
1527-46, Design for a Casket with the Gonzaga Eagle
1530, The Birth of Diana and Apollo
1531, Portrait of a Woman
1531-34, Allegory of the Virtues of Federico II Gonzaga
1532-34, Ceiling of the room of the giants,  Palazzo te Mantua, Italy
1532-34, Victory, Janus, Chronos, and Gaea
1533, The Birth of Bacchus
1534, The Infant Jupiter guarded by the Corybantes on the Island of Crete
1635, Adoration of the Shepherds
Apollo Seated in a Chariot Crowning a Supplicant
Decorazioni di Palazzo Te - Giulio Romano Amore Psiche
L'Enlèvement d'Europe
The fall of the Giants, fresco in Sala dei Giganti
The Triumph of Scipio Africanus

No comments:

Post a Comment