Pier Francesco Mola Explained

Pier Francesco Mola
Birth Name:Pietro Francesco Mola
Birth Date:9 February 1612
Birth Place:Ticino, now Switzerland
Death Place:Rome
Nationality:Italian
Known For:Painting
Movement:Baroque

Pier Francesco Mola, called Il Ticinese (9 February 1612 – 13 May 1666) was an Italian painter of the High Baroque, mainly active around Rome.

Biography

Mola was born in Coldrerio (now in Ticino, Switzerland).[1] At the age of four, he moved to Rome with his father Giovanni Battista Mola, a painter. With the exception of the years 1633–40 and 1641–47, during which he resided in Venice and Bologna, respectively, he lived for the rest of his life in Rome.

His early training was with the late mannerist painter Cavalier d'Arpino, and he worked under the classicizing Francesco Albani.

His masterpiece as a fresco painter is widely considered to be the fresco in the gallery of Alexander VII in the Quirinal Palace Gallery, entitled Joseph making himself known to his Brethren (1657).[2] However, Mola is considered to have been better as a painter of small pictures, especially landscapes.[3] He made six versions of The Flight into Egypt, the earliest of which is The Rest on the Flight into Egypt.

He was elected Principe of the Accademia di San Luca, the Roman artists' professional association, in 1662, but his last years were neither profitable nor prolific. Among his pupils were Jean-Baptiste Forest, Antonio Gherardi, and Giuseppe Bonati.

With his looser style and handling, more naturalistic palette, and interest in exploring landscape elements, Mola differs from the prevailing, highly-theoretical classicism of such leading 17th-century Roman painters as Andrea Sacchi.

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Ecstasy in the Wilderness: Pier Francesco Mola's "The Vision of Saint Bruno" , Dawson W. Carr, The J. Paul Getty Museum Journal, Vol. 19 (1991), 99.
  2. http://www.quirinale.it/palazzo/luoghi/immagini/galleria%20di%20Alessandro%20VII/a-pm-dc-b-0048-01.htm Qurinale Gallery.
  3. Wittkower, Rudolph. Art and Architecture in Italy, 1600–1750. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999. II.136.