Jorge Manuel Theotocópuli Explained

Jorge Manuel Theotocópuli de las Cuevas (1578, Toledo - 29 March 1631, Toledo) was a Greek-Spanish painter and architect. He was the only son of the iconic painter, Doménikos Theotokópoulos, called "El Greco".

Biography

He learned his trade working in the studios of his father. Around 1603, he participated in creating custom altarpieces in Illescas; his first documented work. Later, in 1607, he began to work more independently, producing an altarpiece in Titulcia which, although generally done in his father's style, showed a glimmer of his own personality.[1]

After his father's death in 1614, he focused on his interest in architecture, working mostly in the Herrerian style, as practiced by Nicolás de Vergara el Mozo and . From 1612 to 1618, he was involved in completing construction on the Casa Consistorial (City Hall) of Toledo.[2]

A few years later, in 1625, he became the Master Builder, sculptor and architect for the Toledo Cathedral, where he worked on construction of the cupola of the Mozarabic Chapel, originally designed by in 1519, and the Chapel of the Eighths (Ochavo). He was also involved in a few somewhat less serious projects, such as designing a comedy theater called the "Mesón de la Fruta", which was demolished in the 1870s.[3]

He eventually came to financial ruin from a dispute with the Hospital de Tavera, where his father had left a major commission uncompleted. The affair ended with the seizure of his property.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.artehistoria.com/v2/personajes/3434.htm Brief biography
  2. https://www.museodelprado.es/enciclopedia/enciclopedia-on-line/voz/theotocopuli-jorge-manuel/ Brief biography
  3. http://www.latribunadetoledo.es/noticia/Z318F8D58-A4FB-6C4D-38CBA054C0E3CED9/20140407/hijo/greco El Hijo del Greco