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Gian Paolo Lomazzo

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Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo
Born26 April 1538
Died27 January 1592 (aged 53)
Milan
NationalityItalian
Known forPainting, art criticism
MovementItalian Renaissance
Madonna and Saints, Church of San Marco, Milan

Gian Paolo Lomazzo (26 April 1538 – 27 January 1592; his first name is sometimes also given as "Giovan" or "Giovanni") was an Italian artist and writer on art. Praised as a painter, Lomazzo wrote about artistic practice and art theory after blindness compelled him to pursue a different professional path by 1571.[1] Lomazzo's written works were especially influential to second generation Mannerism in Italian art and architecture.

Early life

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Lomazzo on a medal by Annibale Fontana
Lomazzo depicted on a medal by Annibale Fontana

Gian Paolo Lomazzo was born in Milan to a family who had emigrated from the town of Lomazzo. His early training was with Giovan Battista della Cerva in Milan. He painted a large Allegory of the Lenten Feast for San Agostino in Piacenza (1567). Other works by his hand include an elaborate dome with Glory of Angels for the Capella Foppa in San Marco in Milan, and the Fall of Simon Magus in the wall of the chapel.[citation needed]

Lomazzo was depicted on a ca. 1560 medal by Annibale Fontana which described him as having been introduced by Mercury to Fortune (commercial success).[2][3]

Writings on art theory and criticism

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Lomazzo became blind in 1571 and turned to writing, producing two complex treatises that are milestones in the development of art criticism. His first work, Trattato dell'arte della pittura, scoltura et architettura (1584), is divided into seven books: Proportion, Motion, Color, Light, Perspective, Practice, History, and iconography related to classical and Christian subjects.[4] Lomazzo offered a systematic codification of aesthetics was central to the development of Italian mannerist theories of art.[5] Lomazzo's first treatise was translated into English by British physician Richard Haydocke and published in 1596 as A Tracte Containing the Artes of Curious Paintinge, Carvinge & Buildinge (1596), which included new details about British artists.[6]

Lomazzo's more abstract Idea del tempio della pittura ("The ideal temple of painting", 1590) describes the "four temperaments" theory of human nature and personality and contains explanations about of the role of individuality in judgment and artistic invention.[citation needed]

Lomazzo's writings about art took into account three aspects of art criticism: doctrina, the record of discoveries— such as perspective— that artists had made in the course of history; prattica, the personal preferences and maniera of the artist, and iconography, the literary element in arts. Lomazzo's contribution to art criticism was his systematic extraction of abstract concepts from art, not merely a recounting of the marvels of verisimilitude and technique and anecdotes of the works' reception among contemporaries of the type that Giorgio Vasari had reported in the previous generation. [citation needed]

David Piper quotes[7] his influential views on portraiture:

Emperors above all other Kings and Princes should be endowed with majesty, and have a noble and grave air which conforms to their station in life ... even though they be not so naturally in life.

Giovanni Ambrogio Figino, Cristoforo Ciocca, Girolamo Ciocca[citation needed], and Pietro Martire Stresi[8] were his pupils.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "The arrival of an artist and an art historian: Gian (or Giovan) Paolo Lomazzo was born 26 April 1538 in Milan. – Italian Art Society". www.italianartsociety.org. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  2. ^ Pope-Hennessy, John (1966). The Portrait in the Renaissance. Princeton University Press. p. 209.
  3. ^ Museum, Victoria and Albert. "Gianpaolo Lomazzo | Fontana, Annibale | V&A Explore The Collections". Victoria and Albert Museum: Explore the Collections. Retrieved 13 October 2022.
  4. ^ Chilvers, Ian (13 October 2022). "Lomazzo, Giovanni Paolo". Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-178276-3. Retrieved 13 October 2022. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Kemp, Martin, ed. (2000). The Oxford History of Western Art. Oxford University Press. p. 396.
  6. ^ Lomazzo, Giovanni Paolo (1598). A tracte containing the artes of curious paintinge, caruinge & buildinge. Getty Research Institute. Printed at Oxford : By Ioseph Barnes for R.H.
  7. ^ Piper, David (1992). The English Face. National Portrait Gallery. p. 33.
  8. ^ Dizionario biografico universale, Volume 5, by Felice Scifoni, Publisher Davide Passagli, Florence (1849); page 200.

References

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  • Picinelli, Filippo (1670). Ateneo dei letterati milanesi. Milan: Vigone. pp. 315–7.
  • Kemp, M.: 'Equal Excellences': Lomazzo And The Explanation of Individual Style in the Visual Arts, in Renaissance Studies vol 1.1, March 1987.
  • Lomazzo, Gian Paolo: Trattato dell'arte della pittura, scoltura et architettura [Milano 1584] in Scritti sulle arti Vol. II, Roberto Paolo Ciardi, Florence 1974.
  • Romano, G., Giovan paolo Lomazzo, in Gaudenzio Ferrari e la sua scuola: i cartoni cinquecenteschi dell'Accademia Albertina, Torino 1982
  • J. Lynch, Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo’s self portrait in the Brera, in «Gazette des Beaux-Arts», LXIV, 1964, pp. 189 ss.
  • Manegold, C.: Wahrnehmung - Bild - Gedächtnis. Studien zur Rezeption der aristotelischen Gedächnistheorie in den kunsttheoretischen Schriften des Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo; Ph.D. thesis. Published as Studien zur Kunstgeschichte vol. 158; Olms 2004. ISBN 3-487-12675-3. In German.
  • Lomazzo, G. P. Rabisch, edited by D. Isella, Torino 1993
  • Rabisch. Il grottesco nell’arte del Cinquecento. L’Accademia della Val di Blenio, Lomazzo e l’ambiente milanese, edited by M. Kahn-Rossi and F. Porzio, Milano 1998
  • Isella, D., Lombardia stravagante, Torino 2005
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Media related to Giovanni Paolo Lomazzo at Wikimedia Commons