Gian Pietro Bellori
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Gian Pietro Bellori (1613–1696), also known as Giovanni Pietro Bellori or Giovan Pietro Bellori, was an Italian painter and antiquarian but more famously, a prominent biographer of artists of the 17th century, equivalent to Giorgio Vasari in the 16th century. His Lives of the Artists (Vite de'Pittori, Scultori et Architetti Moderni[1]), published in 1672, was influential in consolidating and promoting the theoretical case for classical idealism in art. [2] As an art historical biographer, he favoured classicising artists rather than Baroque artists to the extent of omitting some of the key artistic figures of 17th-century art altogether.
Biography [edit]
Bellori, possibly the nephew of the antiquarian collector and writer Francesco Angeloni, lived in Angeloni's home in Rome. As a young man, he apparently took art lessons from the painter Domenichino and became a member of the Accademia di San Luca, the painting academy in Rome. However, it is not as a practitioner for which he is well known; he studied and wrote about classical contemporary art and artists.
In 1664 he delivered an influential speech to the Accademia on the Ideal in Art. In 1672 he published this as a preface to his biographies of recent and contemporary artists, entitled: Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architetti moderni (The lives of the modern painters, sculptors, and architects).
In his view, the Renaissance ideal had been rescued from the tangled post-Raphael and Michelangelo styles now known as Mannerism, by the robust classicism of those following Annibale Carracci lead.[3] Bellori advocated idealism over realism or naturalism. This famously led to Bellori's reverence of the painting of Annibale Carracci and repudiation of Caravaggio. His writing of the 'Idea' draws influence from Giovanni Battista Agucchi, Vasari, Leon Battista Alberti, Aristotle and others. In Bellori's "Lives", the artists he most admired were Domenichino and Nicolas Poussin; his friend the sculptor Alessandro Algardi gained more praise than Bernini who is not mentioned and he included the painters Andrea Sacchi and his pupil Carlo Maratta but omitted Pietro da Cortona. He often relies for his facts on the earlier biographies of Roman artists by Giovanni Baglione.
Vasari's definition of disegno or design, (which was at that time seen as the most important element to a painting or sculpture's artistic value), is tied up in the concept of 'prudence'. An artist's work could essentially be seen as a series of choices, and the wisdom of these choices was owed to the character or 'prudence' of the artist. This forms the basis of subsequent value judgments in art by Bellori and his contemporaries. Bellori and Agucchi, after Aristotle, equated the practice of idealism with prudent choice, and naturalism with poor prudence.
Bellori was curator of antiquities for Pope Clement X. In 1671, he was appointed secretary of the Accademia di San Luca. He was later appointed as librarian and antiquarian to Queen Christina of Sweden. He died in 1696 in Rome and was buried in the Church of S. Isidoro.
Bellori's Lives of the Artists covers the brothers Annibale Carracci and Agostino Carracci, Domenico Fontana, Federico Barocci, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Rubens, Anthony van Dyck, Francois Duquesnoy, Domenico Zampieri (il Domenichino), Giovanni Lanfranco, Alessandro Algardi, and Nicholas Poussin; Although he planned a work on Bolognese artists, he only completed entries for Guido Reni, Andrea Sacchi and Carlo Maratta.
References and sources [edit]
- References
- ^ *Bellori, Giovanni Pietro (1672). Vite de'Pittori, Scultori et Architetti Moderni, Parte Prima. Rome: Mascardi.
- ^ *Rudolf, Wittkower (1985). Art and Architecture in Italy 1600-1750. London: Penguin Books. p. 256.
- ^ He meant the classicising tendencies in Annibale's work; the more exuberant tendencies were picked up on by Baroque artists such as Pietro da Cortona
- Sources
- See Frontispiece of Catalogue of Carracci's Palazzo Farnese drawings titled: Annibale Carracci Introduces Painting to Apollo and Minerva Pietro Aquila (1640–1692/1700), after a drawing by Carlo Maratti published in Galeriae Farnesianae Icones by Giovanni Giacomo de' Rossi.[1]
- Haskell, Francis (1993). "Chapter 6". Patrons and Painters: Art and Society in Baroque Italy. 1980. Yale University Press. pp. 158–161.
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