Lazzaro Baldi Explained

Lazzaro Baldi
Birth Name:Lazzaro Baldi
Birth Place:Pistoia, Italy
Death Place:Rome, Italy
Nationality:Italian
Field:Painting, Engraving
Movement:Baroque
Patrons:Pietro da Cortona

Lazzaro Baldi (– 30 March 1703) was an Italian painter and engraver of the Baroque period active mainly in Rome.[1]

Biography

Study

Baldi was born in Pistoia around 1624. He is initially believed to have been a pupil of a little known Francesco Leoncini in his native city.[2] Attracted by the fame of his fellow Tuscan Pietro da Cortona and seeking his instruction, he sought da Cortona in Rome, where he was welcomed. Pascoli said that he obtained his first commissions through da Cortona, under whom he became adept at fresco technique.

Work

The first public work was probably the St Francis painted in the third chapel to the left in the church of San Marco in Rome, dating back to the seventeenth century decoration of the church (1653–56). He painted a David and Goliath for Alexander VII in the Palazzo Quirinale, where his style evolved into a choice of light tones that are typical of his style and is today most noticeable in his frescoes.

Gradually, Baldi came to personal interpretation of Cortona's style, by then the dominant style in Rome along with style represented by Andrea Sacchi. He accepted compositional formulas and the typology, but not the baroque impetus. In the representation of the landscape, he was influenced by Gaspar Dughet - the French artist who painted the background in the Creation of Adam and Eve - and also by Pier Francesco Mola's background in the altarpiece The Rest During the Flight to Egypt.[3]

Religious commissions

He also painted frescoes for the church of San Giovanni in Oleo (1658), and San Giovanni in Patmos (1660–1665) for San Giovanni in Laterano. He also painted an altarpiece of the Martyrdom of St. Lazarus for the church of Santi Luca e Martina. He also worked in Camerino, Pistoia (an Annunciation for the church of San Francesco and a Repose in Egypt for the Umilta) and Perugia (Casa Borgia-Montemellino).[4] As an engraver, Baldi is known for a plate on The Conversion of St. Paul.

Gallery

Teaching

In 1695, he became principe of the Accademia di San Luca in Rome.[5] One of his pupils was Giovanni Domenico Brugieri.[6]

Death

Baldi died in Rome in 1703.

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.academia.edu/37984433/Lidea_di_morte_dartista_e_della_sua_sepoltura_nel_Seicento_italiano_in_Rivista_darte_V_ser._2016_-_a.51_n._6_2018_pp._185-212 The idea of artist's death and his burial in the Italian seventeenth century
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=LZP8JSbY_NwC Guida di Pistoia per gli amanti delle belle arti con notizie
  3. Web site: Borea. Evelina. Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 5 (1963). Treccani. 6 March 2018.
  4. F. Tolomei, page 152-153.
  5. Some Drawings by Lazzaro Baldi, by Nicholas Turner. The Burlington Magazine (1979). p. 154.
  6. Book: Mazzarosa, Marchese Antonio. 1843. Memorie e documenti per servire alla storia di Lucca, Volume 8.. Tipografia de Giuseppe Giusti. 21 . Lucca; Googlebooks .