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Florentine painter
(original name Jacopo Carrucci), who broke away from High Renaissance
classicism to create a more personal, expressive style that is sometimes
classified as early Mannerism.
Pontormo was
the son of Bartolommeo Carrucci, a painter. According to the biographer
Giorgio Vasari, he was apprenticed to
Leonardoda Vinci and afterward to
Mariotto Albertinelli and
Piero di Cosimo. At the age of 18 he entered
the workshop of Andrea del Sarto, and it is this influence that is most
apparent in his early works. Pontormo was precocious (he was praised by
Michelangelo whilst still a youth) and by the time he painted his Joseph
in Egypt in about 1515 (National Gallery, London), one of a series for
Pier Francesco Borgherini, he had already created a distinctive style
- full of restless movement and disconcertingly irrational effects of
scale and space - that put him in the vanguard of Mannerism. In 1518 he
completed an altarpiece in the Church of San Michele Visdomini, Florence,
that also reflects in its agitated - almost neurotic - emotionalism a
departure from the balance and tranquillity of the High Renaissance.
Pontormo was
primarily a religious painter, but he painted a number of sensitive portraits
(he was a major influence on his pupil and adopted son Bronzino) and in
1521 was employed by the Medici family to decorate their villa at Poggio
a Caiano with mythological subjects (Vertumnus and Pomona according to
Vasari, but the identification is disputed) in which an apparently idyllic
scene reveals a strong undercurrent of neurosis. In the Passion cycle
(1522-25) for the Certosa near Florence (now in poor condition), he borrowed
ideas from Albrecht Dürer, whose engravings and woodcuts were circulating
in Italy. The emotional tension apparent in his work reaches its peak
in Pontormo's masterpiece, the altarpiece of the Entombment (c.1526-8)
in the Capponi Chapel of Santa Felicità, Florence. Painted in extraordinarily
vivid colours and featuring deeply poignant figures who seem lost in a
trance of grief, this is one of the key works of Mannerism.
Pontormo became
more and more of a recluse in later life. A diary survives from 1554 to
1557, but the important frescoes in San Lorenzo on which he worked during
the last decade of his life are now known only from drawings (best represented
in the Uffizi); in these the influence of
Michelangelo is apparent. The
diary tells us much of his neurotic character - melancholy and introspective,
dismayed by the slightest illness. Numerous drawngs
survive, and paintings are to be found in various galleries in Europe
and America, as well as in Florence.
Works
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