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Florentine painter,
a pupil of Cosimo Rosselli, whose Christian name he adopted as a patronym.
There are no signed, documented, or dated works by him, and reconstruction
of his oeuvre depends on the account given in
Vasari's Lives. It is one
of Vasari's most entertaining biographies, for he portrays Piero as a
highly eccentric character who lived on hard-boiled eggs, "which he cooked
while he was boiling his glue, to save the firing".
The paintings
for which he is best known are appropriately idiosyncratic - fanciful
mythological inventions, inhabited by fauns, centaurs, and primitive men.
There is sometimes a spirit of low comedy about these delightful works,
but in the so-called Death of Procris (National Gallery, London) he created
a poignant scene of the utmost pathos and tenderness. He was a marvellous
painter of animals and the dog in this picture, depicted with a mournful
dignity, is one of his most memorable creations.
Piero also painted
portraits, the finest of which is that of Simonetta Vespucci (Musée Condé,
Chantilly), in which she is depicted as Cleopatra with the asp around
her neck. His religious works are somewhat more conventional, although
still distinctive. One of his outstanding religious works is the Immaculate
Conception (Uffizi, Florence), which seems to have been the compositional
model for the Madonna of the Harpies by his pupil Andrea del Sarto.
Works
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