Matteo Ponzone Explained

Matteo Ponzone (17th century) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active between 1630 and 1700 mainly in Venice. He was a pupil of Santo Peranda.Several of his works are in the churches and public buildings of Venice, particularly in San Giorgio Maggiore, and in the church of the "Padri Croceferi".

Life

According to several sources, Ponzone was born in Venice, identified as «Mathi et Simon fiol de noble Patron Claudio Bolzon et Agnesina Negro equal in Madonna» born in the parish of Saint Moses November 9, 1583.[1] Some other sources reported his date of birth approximately in 1586 in Rab, in the far north of Dalmatia, that time owned by Republic of Venice.

Matteo Ponzone operated mainly in Venice, unless an interim period of ten years spent in Dalmatia, leaving their works in various locations of the coast.[2]

Ponzone was young student of Jacopo Palma the Younger, and was related to the painter Sante Peranda, who was probably one of his teachers and whose influence is evident in the work of Ponzone. He joined the Fraglia dei Pittori of Venice from 1613 to 1633, being one of the busiest in town throughout this period. In his workshop he had as pupils Antonio Zanchi, Andrea Celesti, Pietro Negri, and Giovanni Carboncino, who assist him in various paintings orders of the last Venetian period.

The large amount of work left in situ adequately define the importance for the history of Venetian painting of the first '600, although the significance was detected only in recent years.[3] Similarly, the caliber of orders received -those of particular importance include works in the churches of San Giorgio Maggiore, Madonna dell'Orto, and San Cassiano - account for the great success and wide contribution of Ponzone to Venetian artistic history.

Major works

In Venice

thumb|Flagellation of Jesus. Madonna dell'Orto

In other regions of the Republic of Venice

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Lino Moretti, New Documents on Ponzone and Forabosco, in Art Veneta, XL, Milan 1986.
  2. According to Moretti (cit. .), the Ponzone received a series procurement in Dalmatia thanks to the fact that his brother was the archbishop of Split Sforza from 1616 to 1640.
  3. See in this regard Rodolfo Pallucchini,The Venetian painting of the seventeenth century, Mondadori, Milan 1981.
  4. significant Dalmatian iconography.