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Parmigianino - Life History

Parmigianino - Life History: Encyclopedia II - Parmigianino - Life History

On 11 January, 1503, Mazzola was born the eighth child of Filippo Mazzola and an unknown mother. Just two years later, his father died of the plague, leaving his sons to be brought up under their uncles, Michele and Pier Ilario. Mazzola learned painting from his father and uncles. Giorgio Vasari, in his Lives of the Artists, notes, his grammar school teacher recommended training in painting after seeing the musing drawings of his student. In 1515, his uncles, Pier Ilario and Michele, receive a commission from Nicolo Zangrandi for the ...

See also:

Parmigianino, Parmigianino - Life History, Parmigianino - Works, Parmigianino - The Madonna with the Long Neck, Parmigianino - List of Works

Parmigianino, Parmigianino - Life History, Parmigianino - List of Works, Parmigianino - The Madonna with the Long Neck, Parmigianino - Works, Mannerism

Parmigianino: Encyclopedia II - Parmigianino - Life History



Parmigianino - Life History

On 11 January, 1503, Mazzola was born the eighth child of Filippo Mazzola and an unknown mother. Just two years later, his father died of the plague, leaving his sons to be brought up under their uncles, Michele and Pier Ilario. Mazzola learned painting from his father and uncles. Giorgio Vasari, in his Lives of the Artists, notes, his grammar school teacher recommended training in painting after seeing the musing drawings of his student. In 1515, his uncles, Pier Ilario and Michele, receive a commission from Nicolo Zangrandi for the decoration of a chapel in San Giovanni Evangelista. This work was later taken over by Mazzola. His career began early, and by the age of sixteen, he had already completed an altarpiece for a local church.

In 1521, Mazzola fled to Viadana at the request of his uncles, after the battle between Francois I and the allied Charles V and Leo X. Here, he painted two panels in tempera, depicting Saint Francis for the church of the Frati de'Zoccoli, and the Mystical Marriage of Saint Catherine for San Pietro. This year and the next, he also worked in San Giovanni and met Correggio on the scaffolding put up for the latter's fresco decorations of the cupola.

Mazzola received a major commission in 1522 to decorate the left transept arm of the cathedral of San Giovanni. However, this was hampered so much by delays that he was not able to execute the commissioned work. Between 1523 and 1524, Mazzola met Galeazzo Sanvitale, with whom he had a long relationship. Also in this time, he met Girolamo Bedoli, a fellow pupil in the shop of Parmigianino's uncles, and who had married Parmigianino's cousin.

In 1524, Mazzola visited Rome, and presented four small paintings, and his Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror, to Clement VII, the new Medici pope, from whom Mazzola hoped to gain patronage. Clement kept the Circumcision. Vasari records that Mazzola was 'celebrated as a Raphael reborn'.

In January 1526, Mazzola and his uncle, Pier Ilario, agree with Maria Bufalina from Citta di Castello, to decorate the church of San Salvatore, in Lauro, with the Vision of Saint Jerome.

In 1527 the sack of Rome caused Mazzola, like many other artists, to flee. He came to Bologna first, then in 1530 Mazzola returned to Parma, where he was hired to participate in the decoration of Santa Maria della Steccata.

In 1531, Mazzola received a commission for two altarpieces, depicting Saint Joseph, and Saint John the Baptist, from the unfinished church of the Steccata. The brotherhood was to erect suitable scaffolding and provide the rosettes for the coffers and the necessary gold. This led in the following year to a contract for the apse and barrel vault to be completed within 18 months. However, by 1535, Mazzola had still not finished them, and promises to do so within two years, or pay back the advance he had received. In December, he nominated Don Nicola Cassola, a Parman cleric at the Roman Curia, to act as his legal representative. Mazzola authorised him to collect the 50 gold scudi from Bonifazio Gozzadini for the Madonna with St. John the Baptist and St. Zacharias.

In 1534, it was decided that the Madonna dal Collo Lungo (the Madonna with the Long Neck) would hang in the chapel of the family of Elena Baiardi.

Mazzola had, naturally, probably expected to succeed Correggio in the favour of the church. However, in April 1538, the administrative office of the Church commissioned Girolamo Bedoli to decorate the apse and choir of the cathedral (duomo). The work had been initially assigned to Giorgio Gandini del Grano, who died prematurely. Worse, the next year, Mazzola was thrown in jail for two months, after the Confraternita decided unanimously to ban him from continuing in their church. He was replaced between 1539 and 1540 by Giulio Romano, who accepted the commission to finish the work of Mazzola. However, shortly afterwards in 1540, Romano requested to withdraw from the contract as the work of Mazzola surpassed his strength.

However, it is believed that at this time, he became a devotee of alchemy. Vasari hypothesized that this was due to his fascination with magic. Scholars now agree that Mazzola's scientific interests may've been due to his obsession with trying to find a new medium for his etchings. As a result of his alchemical researches, he completed little work in the church. He was imprisoned for breach of contract, but later escaped.

On the 24 August 1540, Mazzola died, being buried in the church of the Frati de' Servi "naked with a cross made of cypress wood on his chest".




Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Life History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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