Cristoforo Roncalli Explained

Cristoforo Roncalli, il Pomarancio
Birth Date:1552
Birth Place:Pomarance
Death Date:1626
Death Place:Rome
Nationality:Italian
Known For:Painting
Movement:Mannerism

Cristoforo Roncalli (c. 1552 - 1626) was an Italian mannerist painter. He was one of the three painters known as Pomarancio or Il Pomarancio.

Life

Roncalli was born in Pomarance, a town near Volterra. His training occurred in Tuscany, and around 1578, he relocated to Rome, Italy where he worked for Niccolò Circignani (also known as il Pomarancio).

Most of his fresco work was in Rome, though he worked for a decade in Loreto (1605–1615), where he decorated the New Sacristy. In Rome he decorated the cupola of the church of Santa Maria di Loreto and of San Silvestro in Capite. He helped decorate Santa Maria in Vallicella for the Oratory of San Filippo Neri. He also painted for the Oratory of Santissimo Crocifisso, the Baptism of Constantine and St. Simon in the transept of San Giovanni in Laterano, and designed the mosaics in the Cappella Clementina in the St. Peter's Basilica. One of his pupils from Siena was Alessandro Casolano, and his son Ilario Casolano.

Roncalli was named a Cavaliere of Christ in 1607. He died in Rome in 1626.

Works

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Romano Cordella, Norcia e territorio.