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Italian painter and
decorator, (also called IL ROSSO, original name Giovanni Battista di Jacopo
Rosso) an exponent of the expressive style that is often called early,
or Florentine, Mannerism, and one of the founders of the Fontainebleau
school.
Vasari says
that he 'would not bind himself to any master' (a story that fits in with
his individuality of temperament), but in his youth he learned most from
Andrea del Sarto, and together with Andrea's pupil
Pontormo (Rosso's friend
and close contemporary) he was one of the leading figures in the early
development of Mannerism. The earliest works of Rosso and Pontormo combined
influences from Michelangelo and from northern Gothic engravings in a
novel style, which departed from the tenets of High Renaissance art and
was characterized by its highly charged emotionalism. Rosso's work was
highly sophisticated and varied in mood, ranging from the Assumption (1517;
fresco at SS. Annunziata, Florence) to the refined elegance of the Marriage
of the Virgin (S. Lorenzo, Florence, 1523), to the violent energy of Moses
and the Daughters of Jethro (Uffizi, Florence, c.1523) and to the disquieting
intensity of the Deposítion (Galleria Pittorica, Volterra, 1521).
At the end of
1523 Rosso moved to Rome, where his exposure to Michelangelo's Sistine
ceiling, the late art of Raphael, and the work of Parmigianino resulted
in a radical realignment of his style. His Dead Christ with Angels (c.
1526) exemplifies this new style with its feeling for rarefied beauty
and subdued emotion. Fleeing from the sack of the city in 1527, he worked
briefly in several central Italian towns. In 1530, on the invitation of
Francis I, he went to France (by way of Venice) and remained in the royal
service there until his death. Vasari, whose biography of Rosso also includes
an entertaining story about his pet baboon, says that he killed himself
in remorse after falsely accusing a friend of stealing money from him,
but this may well be apocryphal.
Rosso's principal
surviving work is the decoration of the Galerie François I at the palace
of Fontainebleau (c. 1534-37), where, in collaboration with Francesco
Primaticcio, he developed an ornamental style whose influence was felt
throughout northern Europe. His numerous designs for engravings also exercised
a wide influence on the decorative arts both in Italy and in northern
Europe.
Works
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