Jump to content

Federico Zuccari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Federico Zuccaro)

Federico Zuccaro
Portrait of Federico Zuccaro by Fede Galizia, 1604
Bornc. 1540/1541
Died(1609-07-20)July 20, 1609 or (1609-08-06)August 6, 1609 (sources vary) (aged 67–69)
Known for
  • Painting
  • architecture
Movement

Federico Zuccaro, also known as Federico Zuccari and Federigo Zucchero (c. 1540/1541 – July/August 1609), was an Italian painter, draughtsman, architect and writer. He worked in various cities in Italy, as well as in other countries such as Spain, France, the Spanish Netherlands and England.[1] He was an important representative of late Mannerism in Italian art.[2]

Life and work

[edit]

Zuccaro was born in Sant'Angelo in Vado, near Urbino (Marche), then in the Duchy of Urbino. His parents were the painter Ottaviano de Zucharellis, who changed his surname to Zuccaro in 1569, and Antonia Neri. He was the third child of eight. His siblings were called Taddeo, Bartolomea, Federico, Iacopo, Lucio, Maurizio, Aloysio and Marco Antonio.[1]

In 1550 when he was barely 11 years old, his parents brought him to Rome to study law but Federico preferred a career in art. He trained and worked in the workshop of his elder brother Taddeo who had become a successful painter in Rome. He became quickly integrated into the team of his brother and assisted with the workshop's commissions. Around 1560 he was able to join a group of artists who worked for pope Pius IV at the Vatican where he made decorations for the Casino in the garden and the cycle with the History of Moses at the Belvedere which were commenced in 1660. He helped his brother on the fresco decorations at the Villa Farnese at Caprarola.

Angels Fighting Demons, Vatican, collaboration with Vasari

He left his work on this commission to travel to Venice to work for private Venetian patron, Giovanni Grimani, the patriarch of Aquileia. He made decorations for the Palazzo Grimani di Santa Maria Formosa in Venice and painted frescoes and the altarpiece of the patriarch's chapel in San Francesco della Vigna. During this period in Venice, he met the prominent architect Palladio and the Florentine writer Anton Francesco Doni. They were active in various literary and artistic academies to which they introduced him. He collaborated with Palladio on the design of sets for the theater company Compagnia della Calza degli Accesi and in March 1565 they visited together Cividale del Friuli. He tried unsuccessfully to obtain the commissions for the decoration of the Scuola di San Rocco and the wall with the Paradise fresco in the Doge's Palace. He used his period in Venice to copy works of other masters of the 15th and 16th centuries, including some pages of the precious Grimani Breviary, a manuscript illumination produced by Flemish artists between 1515 and 1520.[3]

The Gate of Virtue

In 1565 Zuccaro left Venice and traveled to Florence where he had been introduced to some important people by his Florentine friends in Venice. He arrived not long before the elaborate wedding of the Grand Duke of Tuscany Francesco I de' Medici with Joanna of Austria on December 1565. Giorgio Vasari, who was in charge of the organisation of the artistic and decorative preparations for the festive occasion, entrusted him with the task of painting in grisaille stories. These were to be used to decorate a fake arch and the great drop-scene that closed off one of the sides of the Sala dei Cinquecento in the Palazzo Vecchio, where the wedding was to take place. A preparatory sketch in colour depicting hunting scenes near Florence is the only item that survives in relation to his contribution.[3]

After returning to Rome in 1566, he found artistic success with his Annunciation (lost) in the church of the Jesuits in Piazza del Collegio Romano and with frescoes in Villa d'Este at Tivoli. His brother Taddeo died suddenly aged 37, on 2 September 1566. He took over all the ongoing commissions of his brother. This kept him busy for many years. He worked extensively on the fresco decorations at the Villa Farnese at Caprarola.[3] In the summer of 1569, a conflict over payments arose between Zuccaro and Cardinal Farnese as a result of which Federico was sent away from Caprarola where he was replaced by Jacopo Bertoia of Parma. Upset by this event, Federico painted and then made copies of a satirical composition which was inspired by the lost painting of the ancient Greek painter Apelles called Calumny of Apelles as described by the ancient author Lucian. In the painting Apelles had expressed his unhappiness with his ignorant patron King Midas. In his painting, Zuccaro depicts King Midas with donkey ears while the painter hero is led away under the protection of the Roman god Mercury.[4] Through this painting Zuccaro for the first time expressed the feelings of being misunderstood by ignorant patron that would accompany him in the remainder of his career. In 1569, with Taddeo's team of assistants dispersed, Federico began to work mostly for the free market.[3]

Calumny, c. 1570

On 22 June 1573 he set out for Paris after accepting to work in the service of Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine, a member of the powerful House of Guise. He arrived in Paris on 24 August 1573. He may have seen Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa when he visited the Palace of Fontainebleau near Paris.[3] From Paris he traveled on 14 August 1574 to Antwerp where he arrived six days later. He visited Brussels, where he prepared a series of cartoons for the tapestry-weavers. On 16 March 1575 he left Antwerp for England, where he stayed until 8 August 1575. In England he received a commission from Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester to portray himself and Queen Elizabeth.[5] Of the portraits of both only the drawings are preserved, dated “1575” and “in london magio 1575.”[1] He also painted Mary, Queen of Scots, Sir Nicholas Bacon, Sir Francis Walsingham, Lord High Admiral Howard.[6] Upon learning that the Grand Duke Francesco I de' Medici wished to commission him with the completion of the Last Judgement in the dome of Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence, left unfinished by Giorgio Vasari upon his death in 1574, he immediately decided to return to Italy. On his return trip he stopped over in Antwerp from 18 to 30 August.[1]

In the execution of the Last Judgement in Florence he only relied in Vasari's general proportional scheme while creating his own original design by changing the manner of representation, technique and style. He painted a portrait of a Man with Two Dogs in the Pitti Palace (Florence), and the Dead Christ and Angels in the Galleria Borghese (Rome). In 1585, he accepted an offer by Philip II of Spain to decorate the new Escorial at a yearly salary of 2,000 crowns. He worked at the palace from January 1586 to end of 1588, when he returned to Rome. His paintings (like those of El Greco before him) were not in line with the austere artistic preferences of the king and many were painted over or heavily retouched after he left. However the parting was amicable: "We must not blame him, but those who sent him to us", said Philip.[7] He was succeeded by Pellegrino Tibaldi. He there founded in 1595, under a charter confirmed by Pope Sixtus V, the Accademia di San Luca, of which he was the first president.[6] Bartolomeo Carducci is said to have studied with him.

In 1603 he spent time in his birthplace Sant'Angelo in Vado, where he completed the Zuccari altarpiece at the monastery of Santa Caterina. He was in Venice, where he perfected the work in the Great Council room at the Doge Palace (signed, dated “1582 / PERFECIT AN. 1603” and bearing his emblem, a lily sugar loaf). He was given a gold necklace and the title of cavaliere knight as his reward for completing this work.[1] From Venice he travelled to Pavia where, together with Cesare Nebbia, he frescoed the hall of the Collegio Borromeo, a work commissioned by Cardinal Federico Borromeo.[8][9]

Zuccari travelled from one court to another. The last stages of his journey took him to Emilia and Romagna. Following a brief illness, he died in July 1609 in Ancona, in the home of a gentleman with whom he was staying and who arranged for his burial.[3]

Draughtsman

[edit]
Harrowing of the Lustful

He was a prolific draughtsman and left a large number of preliminary studies for his paintings. He is the author of one of the most complete illustrations of the Divina Commedia of Dante which he created between 1586 and 1588 during his stay in Spain. The set of 88 sheets was kept by the artist throughout his life and were part of his estate at the time of his death.[2] The sheets are now in the collection of the Uffizi in Florence.[10]

He created around in 1595 a series of 20 drawings, which illustrate the early life of his older brother Taddeo, starting with the hardships and disappointments during the period of his training in Rome until his first artistic successes at the age of 18. In addition to 16 scenes depicting Taddeo's life, the series includes four drawings of allegorical Virtues flanking the Zuccaro emblem. The set is kept at the Getty Center.[11]

Art writer

[edit]

Zuccaro also published books on art theory and art history.[6] In his book L'idea de' Pittori, Scultori, ed Architetti (1607) he sets out a complex theoretical exposition on the idea of design.[1]

Selected fresco projects

[edit]

He was involved in the following fresco projects:

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Maddalena Spagnolo, ZUCCARI, Federico, in: Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 100 (2020)
  2. ^ a b Maria Donati Barcellona, Zuccari, Federico in: Enciclopedia Dantesca (1970)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Cristina Acidini Luchinat, The life of the Zuccari brothers at la Repubblica of the Arts
  4. ^ Federico Zuccaro (c. 1542-1609), Calumny at the Royal Collection
  5. ^ Goldring, Elizabeth: "The Earl of Leicester's Inventory of Kenilworth Castle, c.1578", English Heritage Historical Review, Vol. 2, 2007, p. 38
  6. ^ a b c  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainMiddleton, John Henry (1911). "Zuccaro". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1047.
  7. ^ Trevor-Roper, Hugh; Princes and Artists, Patronage and Ideology at Four Habsburg Courts 1517-1633, Thames & Hudson, London, 1976, p 69
  8. ^ "Visit the College". Almo Collegio Borromeo Pavia. Collegio Borromeo. Archived from the original on 23 September 2022. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  9. ^ "Collegio Borromeo - complesso Pavia (PV)". Lombardia Beni Culturali. Regione Lombardia. Retrieved 23 September 2022.
  10. ^ Eike D. Schmidt, Dante Illustrated. at the Uffizi Galleries
  11. ^ Federico Zuccaro, Twenty Drawings Depicting the Early Life of Taddeo Zuccaro at the Getty Center
  12. ^ Shulman, Ken (3 December 1989). "ART: On the Scaffolds, a Delicate Labor in the Duomo". New York Times. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  13. ^ Berti, Federico (2013), Domenico Cresti, il Passignano,"fra la natione fiorentina e veneziana": Viatico per il periodo giovanile con una inedita Sacra Famiglia, Florence: De Stijl Art Publishing, p. 18, ISBN 978-88-904451-3-2

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]