Jacopo Zoboli Explained

Jacopo Zoboli, also known by Giacomo, (23 May 1681 – 22 February 1767) was an Italian painter of the Baroque style.

Biography

Jacopo was born in Modena, son of Giambattista Zoboli and Lucrezia Panara. Following an initial apprenticeship with Francesco Stringa (1635–1709), he briefly relocated to Bologna where he studied under Giovan Gioseffo Dal Sole (1654–1719) from 1701 to 1707. Upon returning to Modena, he worked on the frescoes of Ducal Palace of Modena from 1707 to 1712, initially under the supervision of Stringa, and following that master's death, under the guidance of Jacopino Consetti. He then moved to Rome between 1712 and 1713, where he resided until his death in 1767. Zoboli in Rome was enrolled as member of the Congregation of the Virtuosi at the Pantheon in 1718 and subsequently the Accademia di San Luca on 2 September 1725, during the period when the painter Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari was prince of the academy. Zoboli was honored with the title of "Academic of Honor" by the Accademia Clementina of Bologna and was friend and collaborator of Sebastiano Conca, a leading painter in 18th century Rome.

From 1718 to 1738, he lived in palazzo Petroni in Piazza del Gesù, within the residence of the ambassador of the Duchy of Modena and Reggio, located in Rome. Zoboli's workshop not far from the residence, in the premises of Palazzo Venezia, hosted by Angelo Maria Querini (his presence at this Palazzo is documented since at least 1727). From 1738 to 1760, Zoboli lived and worked on the second floor of Palazzo Farnese, thanks to cardinal Neri Maria Corsini, the nephew of Pope Clement XII. He then moved to Palazzo Savelli Orsini on Via Monte Savello in the territory of the (then) parish of the Basilica of San Nicola in Carcere.

In August 1718, Zoboli joined the Archconfraternity of the Sacred Stigmata of St. Francis, a group celebrating the miracle of the Santissime Stimmate di San Francesco. Zoboli participated in these gatherings until his death. In 1724, Zoboli painted the Death of Caesar for the noble family of the Marquises Rangoni of Modena. For several scholars, including Rudolph, Zoboli "painted works that show a surprising anticipation of Neoclassicism of the second half of the 18th century", and thus was an early exponent of this move away from the Baroque. For Vittorio Casale, Zoboli expressed a "conscious proto-neoclassicism" and interpreted his aesthetic ideals of a rationalistic Arcadia "opposed to the effusions of the Baroque".

Zoboli was active primarily in Rome for both ecclesiastical and private commissions, encouraged by Cardinal Neri Maria Corsini. In 1727, he painted the Encounter between the Holy Virgin and Elizabeth for the Basilica of Sant'Eustachio. Two years later, for the same Basilica, Zoboli painted St Jerome listening to the trumpet of the Last Judgment, which was much appreciated by his contemporaries, and made him famous even outside the capital. Outside of Rome, his most significant paintings are found in Modena and Brescia. In 1732, Bishop and Cardinal Angelo Maria Querini commissioned the main altarpiece of the Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta being built for Brescia. The positive acclaim of this altarpiece led the Philippine Fathers of Peace, in 1742 to commission Zoboli in 1742 to paint the main altarpiece for their church, then under construction: the painting depicts Saint Philip Neri, founder of the Congregation of the Oratorians. Completed in Rome in 1745 and placed on the second altar of the right aisle of the Church of Santa Maria della Pace in Brescia.

In 1745, he painted Triumph of Faith for the Monastery of the Holy Cross in Coimbra, Portugal. In 1748, Zoboli then created The Assumption for the church of Santa Maria degli Angeli in Brescia, annexed to the convent of the Augustinian nuns of Brescia. Also famous is the work depicting Saint Francis of Sales and Blessed Joan Frances de Chantal, located in the Visitation Monastery in Madrid. Commissioned by the Spanish queen Maria Barbara of Braganza, wife of Ferdinand VI of Spain, the piece was completed in 1754. In 1747, alongside Giovanni Paolo Panini, Zoboli compiled the inventory of the Sacchetti collection purchased by Pope Benedict XIV to form the initial nucleus of the nascent Pinacoteca Capitolina.

Many paintings by Zoboli, although mentioned in various documentary sources, are currently unidentifiable or have been destroyed. Regarding numerous foreign commissions in different European states, the Nativity of Jesus and Santa Caterina Fieschi commissioned by King John V of Portugal; the Blessed Giovanni Regis enjoys the glory of heaven (1716–1719), commissioned by Prince Elector Maximilian II of Bavaria; the Transport of the Ark with David dancing and the Judgment of Solomon sent to London; the Madonna with Child and other figures sent to Cologne; St John Nepomunk with angels sent to Prague; and Pieta with the Maries sent to Vienna cannot be located. Additionally, about thirty works destined for churches and palaces in Rome are also untraceable, according to a detailed list published by Maria Barbara Guerrieri Borsoi. In the past, some paintings have been erroneously attributed to Zoboli. In particular: the Marriage of Mary and the Presentation at the Temple in the Italian Capuchin church in Coimbra and a Suicide of Lucretia in the National Gallery of Dublin.

By express testamentary will, he was buried in the Chiesa delle Santissime Stimmate - Church of the Most Holy Stigmata of St. Francis in Rome, although the exact location of his tomb is currently unknown.

Paintings

Further reading

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