After decorating the apartment of a Benedictine abbess, Correggio was called by the nearby Benedictine monks of Parma to decorate their church of San Giovanni Evangelista. The most spectacular of the paintings is the illusionist dome fresco depicting Jesus and …
The Camera di San Paolo (1519) was Correggio’s first major commission in Parma. In the private quarters of a Benedictine abbess named Giovanna Piacenza, he executed a decorative fresco program filled with mythological and festive motifs. The particularly beautiful illusionistic …
From medieval graffiti, Raphael suffering medical malpractice, Siena’s many contrade, the damaged part of the Sistine Chapel ceiling, the four biblical rivers as symbols of the Evangelists, anatomical dissection in the ancient world – and much, much more – this …
Jacopo Pontormo’s altarpiece for the Capponi Chapel in the church of Santa Felicità in Florence, Italy, is one of the most beautiful paintings of the Italian Renaissance. Yet, the subject matter of painting still confuses art historians as it does …
In 1525, Jacopo Pontormo, one of the greatest Mannerist painters of Florence, was commissioned to decorate the family chapel of Ludovico Capponi in the church of Santa Felicità. While the altarpiece is the chapel’s most celebrated work, Pontormo also decorated …
The art produced in Italy in the first half of the 16th century seemed to intentionally reject the principles of Renaissance art. Artists such as Pontormo, Rosso Fiorentino, Giulio Romano, Parmigianino, and Bronzino introduced their own particular styles to their …
With the death of Pope Leo X in 1521, Michelangelo was forced to abandon his work on the New Sacristy and to return to the unfinished tomb of Pope Julius II. It was, in fact, for the tomb that Michelangelo …
This episode examines the extraordinary tomb of Giuliano de’ Medici in the New Sacristy. The allegorical figures of “Day” and “Night” are two of Michelangelo’s most beautiful statues, while the “Effigy of Giuliano de’ Medici” is a revolution in funerary …
This episode examines the extraordinary tomb of Lorenzo de’ Medici in the New Sacristy. The allegorical figures of “Dawn” and “Dusk” are two of Michelangelo’s most elegant statues, while the “Effigy of Lorenzo de’ Medici” is a clear allusion to …
While working on the facade project of San Lorenzo, Michelangelo undertook another architectural project for Medici Pope Leo X. Known as the New Sacristy, and located in the Medici Chapels in Florence, Italy, the space was intended to serve as …