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Italian writer, painter,
and architect, best known for his book on the lives of major Italian Renaissance
artists.
Vasari was born
on July 30, 1511, in Arezzo. Trained in art as a child, he went to Florence,
where he worked in the studio of
Andrea del Sarto and won the patronage
of the Medici family. Among Vasari's major surviving paintings are murals
in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence, and the Vatican in Rome.
As an architect
Vasari was a follower of his brilliant contemporary
Michelangelo. Among
the important buildings he designed are the Palazzo degli Uffizi in Florence,
now a museum, and a number of palaces and churches in Pisa and Arezzo.
It is as a writer,
however, that he is most famous. His Lives of the Artists (1550, revised
1568; trans. 1912-14, 10 vol.), one of the earliest works on art written
by an artist of merit, is a primary source of information about the artists
of the Italian Renaissance. The revised edition includes his autobiography
in addition to the lives of Michelangelo and other major painters of the
time. Vasari's book offers his personal evaluation of the works of these
artists, as well as discussions on the state of the arts. His easy, natural
writing style helped to make his book one of the most enduring of art
histories. He died in Florence on June 27, 1574.
"Vasari, Giorgio,"
Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright
(c) 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.
Works
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