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12 December 2024
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Baldassare Franceschini
(
Italian
,
1611
–
1690
)
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The preeminent fresco painter in Florence in the latter half of the 17th century, Baldassare Franceschini, known as Il Volterrano after his birthplace, studied with Matteo Rosselli and Giovanni da San Giovanni. His first significant independent commission came in 1636, when he was entrusted by Prince Don Lorenzo de’ Medici with the fresco decoration of the courtyard of the Medici villa of La Petraia, near Florence. The cycle of scenes from Medici history was not completed for another twelve years, however, as other commissions interrupted the project. Volterrano painted frescoes, altarpieces and easel pictures for numerous churches and palaces in Florence, Volterra and Rome. His large-scale, crowded fresco compositions reflect an adaptation into a Florentine idiom of the Roman Baroque manner, derived from Pietro da Cortona’s frescoes in the Palazzo Pitti, where Volterrano himself also worked, decorating the ceiling of the Sala di Vittoria della Rovere. His painting style also shows the influence of Correggio; indeed one of his biographers, NiccolÚ Gabburri, describes the artist as ‘
il secondo Correggio o pure il Coreggio dei Fiorentini
.’ In 1650 Volterrano painted a large fresco of
The Angels Ministering to Christ in the Wilderness
for the refectory of the Florentine convent of Santa Teresa, a work he considered to be one of his finest achievements. Some of the artist’s most significant commissions were for Santissima Annunziata in Florence, where his fresco decoration of the chapel of Sant’Ansano in 1643 began an association with the church that was to last almost to the end of his career. Between 1664 and 1683, Volterrano executed paintings for the ceiling of the nave of the church and an altarpiece of
San Filippo Benizzi in Glory
, and his work at Santissima Annunziata culminated in the cupola fresco of
The Coronation of the Virgin
. Commissioned by the Grand Duke Cosimo III, the fresco was the artist’s last major project, as he suffered a stroke shortly after its completion.
Volterrano was undoubtedly one of the finest draughtsmen of the Florentine Seicento. Both of the artist’s biographers, Filippo Baldinucci and Niccolo Gabburri, owned several of his drawings, and they were also popular with collectors. An album with some four hundred drawings by Volterrano (‘
un gran libro di circa quatrocento disegni
’), for example, was in the collection of the Conti della Gherardesca, for whom the artist worked on several occasions. The largest groups of drawings by Volterrano that survive today are in the collections of the Uffizi in Florence and the Albertina in Vienna, while a number of designs for architecture, decorative motifs and metalwork are in the Kunstbibliothek in Berlin.
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