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Giovanni Pietro Bellori

Giovanni Pietro Bellori (15 January 1613 – 19 February 1696),[7] also known as Giovan Pietro Bellori or Gian Pietro Bellori, was an Italian art theorist, painter and antiquarian, who is best known for his work Lives of the Artists, considered the seventeenth-century equivalent to Vasari's Vite. His Vite de' Pittori, Scultori et Architetti Moderni,[8] published in 1672, was influential in consolidating and promoting the theoretical case for classical idealism in art.[9] As an art historical biographer, he favoured classicising artists rather than Baroque artists to the extent of omitting some of the key artistic figures of 17th-century art altogether.

Giovanni Pietro Bellori
Gian Pietro Bellori, portrait by Carlo Maratta
Born(1613-01-15)January 15, 1613
DiedFebruary 19, 1696(1696-02-19) (aged 83)
Resting placeChurch of S. Isidoro
Occupation(s)Biographer, painter, librarian, art historian, historian, archaeologist
Known forLives of the Artists
Parent(s)Giacomo Bellori and Artemetia Bellori (née Giannotti)
Academic background
Influences
Academic work
DisciplineClassical archaeology, art history, aesthetics
Influenced

Biography edit

Bellori was born in Rome on 15 January 1613, the son of Giacomo, a farmer. He was reared and educated by his maternal uncle, Francesco Angeloni, who was an antiquarian, writer of comedies, dialogues and operas, a numismatist (Historia Augusta, 1641) and collector of art, antiquities and natural history (he had Correggio, Bassano and Titian among his paintings). Angeloni fostered in Bellori an interest in collecting and interpreting antiquities, and indeed his interest in the antique was pivotal to his whole career.[10] On his death in 1652, Angeloni designated Bellori as his sole heir, but the will was invalidated by Angeloni's brothers, who sold off most of the collection, leaving Bellori with the house on the Pincio, located on the via Orsina near the church of Sant'Isidoro, where he had grown up and in which he lived all his life.

Bellori had been keenly interested in art since childhood. As a young man, he took art lessons from the painter Domenichino. Philip Skippon, who visited Bellori in 1665, noted, "he draws pictures and makes good landskips", and as late as 1689 when Bellori was admitted to the French Academy he was listed as a painter. He became a member of the Accademia di San Luca by 1652 and was Secretary 1652–3, 1666, and 1668–72. Bellori was a close friend of many artists, including Nicolas Poussin, Giovanni Angelo Canini, François Duquesnoy, Charles Alphonse du Fresnoy and Carlo Maratta.[11]

In the spring of 1661 he accompanied the representative of Louis XIV in Rome, M. Parisot on a long trip through Southern Italy. He became a member of the French Academy in 1689.

He was appointed Commissario delle Antichità by Pope Clement X on 31 May 1670. Bellori was librarian and antiquarian to Queen Christina of Sweden from 1677 to 1689. While serving Christina, he certainly met Filippo Baldinucci, the Florentine writer on art, who visited Rome in 1681 on the occasion of the Queen's commission to him for a biography of Gian Lorenzo Bernini.

By 1695 Bellori was very ill, suffering especially in his lower legs, and had not left his house since mid 1694. He died on 19 February 1696, and was buried in the Church of S. Isidoro.

Bellori lived on the Pincian Hill near S. Isidoro, where he rebuilt the dispersed collection of Angeloni. Travellers' diaries and guidebooks confirm that Bellori had assembled a small but well-chosen gallery, with works attributed to Titian, Tintoretto, Van Dyck, Maratta and Annibale Carracci, amongst others.[10] After his death, his collection was purchased by Frederick I of Prussia and Augustus III of Saxony. Bellori's collection of ancient gems and medals found their way to Dresden where they helped shape J.J. Winckelmann's vision of antiquity.[1]

The famous French antiquarian Jacob Spon, who met Bellori in Rome in 1675, considered him «très savant en toutes sortes d'antiquités». According to another famous visitor, Bishop Gilbert Burnet, «Bellori is deservedly famous for his knowledge of the Greek and Egyptian antiquities and for all that belongs to the mythologies and superstitions of the Heathens». Burnet included him in a list of the most learned men he met in Rome: Raffaello Fabretti, Honoré Fabri, Francesco Nazzari, Cardinal César d'Estrées, Cardinal Philip Howard and Ludovico Maracci.[12]

Bellori was one of the most important intellectuals of seventeenth-century Italy. He was the author of several learned archeological treatises, widely respected by later antiquarians and reprinted in great part in the Thesaurus of Graevius and Gronovius. His Nota dei Musei (1664) catalogued private and ecclesiastical libraries and collections in Rome and included the first detailed study of ancient painting. His poem 'On Painting' was published in 1642 to introduce Baglione's 'Lives'. Bellori's own Vite ('Lives', 1672) — a basic source for the history of 17th-century art — includes a selection of artists, on whom he had been collecting material from the 1640s. Some are Roman and others claimed for the Roman school, and the biographies are introduced by a scholarly apologia on idealization. His friend Carlo Maratta contributed funds for the posthumous publication of Bellori's Descrizzione delle imagini dipinte de Raffaelle d'Urbino (1696), which describes Raphael Rooms in the Apostolic Palace and the Loggia of Cupid and Psyche in the Villa Farnesina.

Works edit

In 1664 Bellori delivered an influential speech to the Accademia di San Luca on the Ideal in Art. In 1672 he published this as a preface to his biographies of recent and contemporary artists, entitled: Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architetti moderni (The lives of the modern painters, sculptors, and architects). Since then it has acquired almost canonical status as one of the earliest declarations of the principles of Classicism.[13]

Bellori's Lives of the Artists is one of the foundational texts of the history and criticism of European art.[14] It covers the brothers Annibale Carracci and Agostino Carracci, Domenico Fontana, Federico Barocci, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Rubens, Anthony van Dyck, Francois Duquesnoy, Domenico Zampieri (il Domenichino), Giovanni Lanfranco, Alessandro Algardi and Nicolas Poussin. Bellori planned a work on Bolognese artists, but, only completed entries for Guido Reni, Andrea Sacchi and Carlo Maratta. The life of Maratta was published in 1732 and the three biographies together, edited from his manuscript, in 1942.[15]

Views edit

In Bellori's view, the Renaissance ideal had been rescued from the tangled post-Raphael and Michelangelo styles now known as Mannerism, by the robust classicism of those following Annibale Carracci's lead.[16] Bellori advocated idealism over realism or naturalism. This famously led to Bellori's reverence of the painting of Annibale Carracci and repudiation of Caravaggio. His writing of the 'Idea' is influenced by Giovanni Battista Agucchi, Vasari, Leon Battista Alberti, Aristotle and others. In Bellori's Lives the artists he most admired were Domenichino and Nicolas Poussin; his friend the sculptor Alessandro Algardi was praised while Bernini was not mentioned and he included the painters Andrea Sacchi and his pupil Carlo Maratta, however, he omitted Pietro da Cortona. Bellori often relied for his facts on the earlier biographies of Roman artists by Giovanni Baglione.

Vasari's definition of disegno or design, at that time seen as the most important artistic element, is tied up in the concept of 'prudence'. An artist's work could essentially be seen as a series of choices, and the wisdom of these choices was owed to the character or 'prudence' of the artist. This forms the basis of subsequent value judgments in art by Bellori and his contemporaries. Bellori and Agucchi, after Aristotle, equated the practice of idealism with prudent choice, and naturalism with poor prudence.

Archaeological work edit

By the late 1660s Bellori assisted Leonardo Agostini in his duties as papal Commissario delle Antichità (contributing much of the commentary to Agostini's gem collection[17]), and in 1670 he took up the post himself, holding it for the next 24 years while undertaking an astonishing programme of further publications. These were at first sponsored by Cardinal Massimo, one on the Severan Marble Plan (1673), perhaps illustrated by himself, and one on Massimo's coin collection (1676). After Massimo's death in 1677, Bellori went on to catalogue rare coins in Cardinal Gaspare Carpegna's library, and then those belonging to Queen Christina of Sweden, for whom he also served as antiquario. In collaboration with the printer Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi and the painter-engraver Pietro Santi Bartoli (1635–1700), who had also worked for Massimo, he produced a hugely successful series of corpora, illustrated by Bartoli's engravings. An edition of prints of ancient bas-reliefs had already appeared by 1677, to be followed by the Column of Marcus Aurelius and its reliefs in 1679, the paintings in the Tomb of the Nasonii on the Via Flaminia, discovered in 1674 (published 1680), the triumphal arches of Rome in 1690, ancient funerary lamps in 1691-8 and ancient burials in 1697.[18]

Bellori was an exceptional antiquario by any definition. Unlike him, most seventeenth-century antiquari published nothing, and when they did, like Agostini, it was usually a promotional catalogue of their own collection or just one or two items from it. Ménestrier's one published work, a study of the image Ephesian Diana, based on examples in his own collection appeared close to twenty years after his death, also benefiting from Bellori's ministrations.

List of works edit

 
Columna Cochlis M. Aurelio Antonino Augusto dicata, Rome 1704.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori, Icones et segmenta illustrium e marmore tabularum quae Romae adhuc extant a Francisco Perrier delineata..., Parisiis 1645.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori, Il Bonino, ovvero avvertimenti al Tristano intorno agli errori nelle medaglie del primo tomo de' suoi Commentari historici, s.l. circa 1649 (difesa dell'Angeloni attaccato per la Historia Augusta)
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori, Notae in numismata tum Ephesia, tum aliarum urbium apibus insignita, Romae 1658 (rist. con Expositio symbolici deae Syriae simulacri, in Claude-François Menestrier, Symbolica Dianae Ephesiae statua, Romae 1660 e 1688, e in Jakob Gronovius, Thesaurus graecarum antiquitatum, VII, Venetiis 1735).
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori; Pietro Santi Bartoli (1667). Colonna Traiana eretta dal senato, e popolo romano all'imperatore Traiano Augusto nel suo foro in Roma. Scolpita con l'historie della guerra dacica la prima e la seconda espeditione, e vittoria contro il re Decebalo. Nuovamente disegnata, et intagliata da Pietro Santi Bartoli. Con l'espositione latina d'Alfonso Ciaccone, compendiata nella vulgare lingua sotto ciascuna immagine, accresciuta di medaglie, inscrittioni, e trofei, da Gio. Pietro Bellori. Rome: Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi.
  • Bellori, Giovanni Pietro (1672). Vite de' Pittori, Scultori et Architetti Moderni, Parte Prima. Rome: Mascardi.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori (1673). Fragmenta vestigii veteris Romae ex lapidibus Farnesianis: Nunc primum in Iucem edita cum notis Io. Petri Bellorii (in Latin). Rome: typis Iosephi Corvi, sumptibus Ioannis Iacobi de Rubeis.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori e Pietro Santi Bartoli, Columna Antoniniana Marci Aurelii Antonini Augusti Rebus Gestis Insignis: Germanis Simul, Et Sarmatis, Gemino Bello Devictis Ex S. C. Romae In Antonini Foro, Ad Via[m] Flaminia[m], Erecta, Ac Utriusqve Belli Imaginibus Anaglyphice Insculpta Nunc Primum A Petro Sancti Bartolo, Iuxta Delineationes In Bibliotheca Barberina Asservatas, A Se Cum Antiquis Ipsius Columnae Signis Collatas, Aere Incisa Et In Lucem Edita, Cum Notis Excerptis Ex Declaralionibus Io. Petri Bellorii. Rome 1675.
  • Imagines veterum philosophorum (Rome 1685).
  • Francesco Angeloni (1685). Giovanni Pietro Bellori (ed.). La Historia Augusta Da Giulio Cesare infino a Costantino il Magno. Illustrata Con la verità delle Antiche Medaglie (2 ed.). a spese di Felice Cesaretti libraro all'Insegna della Regina.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori; Pietro Santi Bartoli (1690). Veteres Arcus Augustorum triumphis insignes ex reliquiis quae Romae adhuc supersunt, cum imaginibus triumphalibus restituti, antiquis nummis notisque I. Petri Bellorii illustrati (in Latin). Romae: Ad templum Sanctae Mariae de Pace.
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori; Pietro Santi Bartoli (1691). Le antiche lucerne sepolcrali figurate raccolte dalle caue sotterranee, e grotte di Roma, nelle quali si contengono molte erudite memorie disegnate, ed intagliate nelle loro forme da Pietro Santi Bartoli divise in tre parti con l'osservationi di Gio. Pietro Bellori. Rome: nella stamperia di Gio. Francesco Buagni. This work was translated into Latin by Alexander Duker, and published at Leyden, 1702, fol.[19]
  • Giovanni Pietro Bellori; Pietro Santi Bartoli (1693). Admiranda Romanarum antiquitatum ac veteris sculpturae vestigia : anaglyphico opere elaborata ex marmoreis exemplaribus quae Romae adhuc extant in Capitolio, aedibus hortisque virorum principum ad antiquam elegantiam a Petro Sancti Bartolo delineata, incisa. In quibus plurima ac praeclarissima ad Romanam historiam, veteres mores dignoscendos, ob oculos ponuntur. Notis Io. Petri Bellorii illustrata (in Latin). Romae: sumptibus ac typis edita a Joanne Jacobo de Rubeis.
  • Pietro Santi Bartoli, Giovanni Pietro Bellori, Gli antichi sepolcri overo mausolei romani... trovati in... Roma... Roma: Antonio de Rossi, 1699. This work was translated into Latin by Alexander Duker, and published at Leyden, 1702, fol.[20]
  • Michel-Ange de La Chausse; Pietro Sante Bartoli; Giovanni Pietro Bellori; Francesco Bartoli (1738). Picturae antiquae cryptarum romanarum et sepulcri Nasonum (in Latin). Roma: ex typographia S. Michaelis ad Ripam.

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e Donahue 1965.
  2. ^ George Alexander Kennedy; H. B. Nisbet; Claude Rawson; Raman Selden, eds. (1989). The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism. Vol. 4. Cambridge University Press. p. 110. ISBN 9780521317207.
  3. ^ Malvasia, Carlo Cesare (2000). Malvasia's Life of the Carracci: Commentary and Translation. Penn State Press. p. 37. ISBN 0-271-01899-2.
  4. ^ Panofsky, Erwin (1968). Idea: a Concept in Art Theory. University of South Carolina Press. p. 242. Bellori is the "predecessor of Winckelmann" not only as an antiquarian but also as an art theorist. Winckelmann's theory of the "ideally beautiful" as he expounds it in Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums, IV.2.33 ff., thoroughly agrees—except for the somewhat stronger Neoplatonic impact, which is to be explained perhaps more as an influence of Raphael Mengs than as an influence of Shaftesbury—with the content of Bellori's Idea (to which Winckelmann also owes his acquaintance with the letters of Raphael and Guido Reni); he frankly recognizes this indebtedness in Anmerkungen zur Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums (1767), p. 36.
  5. ^ Von Schlosser, Julius Ritter (1924). Die Kunstliteratur: Ein Handbuch zur Quellenkunde der neueren Kunstgeschichte. Vienna: Kunstverlag Anton Schroll & Co. p. 423.
  6. ^ Baeumler, Alfred (1999) [1934]. Estetica. Padova: Edizioni di Ar. p. 124.
  7. ^ Pace 1996.
  8. ^ Bellori 1672.
  9. ^ Wittkower 1999, vol. 2, p. 87.
  10. ^ a b Sparti 2001, p. 60.
  11. ^ Cropper 2015, p. 140.
  12. ^ Burnet, Gilbert (1686). Some Letters Containing, an Account of what Seemed Most Remarkable in Switzerland, Italy, &c. Amsterdam: Abraham Acher. pp. 230–232.
  13. ^ Raben 2006, p. 126.
  14. ^ Cropper, Elizabeth (December 2006). "Giovan Pietro Bellori, the Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors and Architects: A New Translation and Critical Edition by Alice Sedgwick Wohl". The Burlington Magazine. 148 (1245): 854. JSTOR 20074653.
  15. ^ Michelangelo Piacentini, ed. (1942). Le vite inedite del Bellori: I. Giovan Pietro Bellori, vite di Guido Reni, Andrea Sacchi e Carlo Maratti. Rome: Biblioteca d'Arte Editrice.
  16. ^ He meant the classicising tendencies in Annibale's work; the more exuberant tendencies were picked up on by Baroque artists such as Pietro da Cortona.
  17. ^ The work, which grouped the gems according to the themes represented, was translated into Latin by Jakob Gronovius, and published in Amsterdam, 1685.
  18. ^ Claridge, Amanda, “Archaeologies, Antiquaries and the Memorie of Sixteenth-and Seventeenth-Century Rome,” in Ilaria Bignamini (ed.), Archives and Excavations, Archaeological Monographs of the British School at Rome 14 (2004), 36.
  19. ^ Jakob Gronovius, ed. (1702). Thesaurus antiquitatum graecarum. Vol. XII. Leyden: Petrus van der Aa.
  20. ^ Jakob Gronovius, ed. (1702). Thesaurus antiquitatum graecarum. Vol. XII. Leyden: Petrus van der Aa.

Bibliography

  • 'Corpus informatico belloriano' 2014-04-24 at the Wayback Machine, edited by Paola Barocchi, Sonia Maffei, Tomaso Montanari. Centro di Ricerche Informatiche per i Beni Culturali della Scuola Normale di Pisa.
  • Heres, Gerald (1979). "Winckelmann, Bernini, Bellori. Betrachtungen zur "Nachahmung der Alten"". Forschungen und Berichte. 19: 9–16. doi:10.2307/3880817. JSTOR 3880817.
  • Perini, Giovanna (1989). "L'arte di descrivere: La tecnica dell'ecfrasi in Malvasia e Bellori". I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance. 3: 175–206. doi:10.2307/4603664. JSTOR 4603664. S2CID 178550112.
  • Haskell, Francis (1993). "Chapter 6". Patrons and Painters: Art and Society in Baroque Italy. 1980. Yale University Press. pp. 158–161.
  • Pace, Claire (1996). "Bellori, Giovanni Pietro". In Jane Turner (ed.). The Dictionary of Art. Vol. 3. London: Macmillan. pp. 673–675. ISBN 9780333749395.
  • Wittkower, Rudolf (1999). Art and Architecture in Italy 1600–1750, sixth edition in 3 volumes, revised by Joseph Connors and Jennifer Montagu. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300078909.
  • Sparti, Donatella Livia (2001). "Giovan Pietro Bellori and Annibale Carracci's Self-Portraits. From the "Vite" to the Artist's Funerary Monument". Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz. 45 (1/2): 60–101. JSTOR 27654540.
  • Raben, Hans (2006). "Bellori's Art: The Taste and Distaste of a Seventeenth-Century Art Critic in Rome". Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art. 32 (2/3): 126–146. JSTOR 20355327.
  • Keazor, Henry (2008). ""Spirito abile" ed "Elevatissimo ingegno". Giovan Pietro Bellori e Carlo Cesare Malvasia". Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz. 52 (1): 73–82. JSTOR 30249347.
  • Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History (2010). Commentary on Annibale Carracci Introduces Painting to Apollo and Minerva, etching by Pietro Aquila (1640–1692/1700), after a drawing by Carlo Maratti, frontispiece to Galeriae Farnesianae Icones..., a catalogue of Carracci's Palazzo Farnese drawings, published by Giovanni Giacomo de' Rossi in 1674, with a text by Giovanni Pietro Bellori. Metropolitan Museum of Art website, accessed 3 March 2015.
  • Cotensin, Ismène (2021). "Les Vite de Giovanni Pietro Bellori (1672) : entre valorisation et dispersion du patrimoine vasarien". LECEMO - les Cultures de l'Europe Méditérranéenne Occidentale. Sorbonne Nouvelle.

External links edit

giovanni, pietro, bellori, january, 1613, february, 1696, also, known, giovan, pietro, bellori, gian, pietro, bellori, italian, theorist, painter, antiquarian, best, known, work, lives, artists, considered, seventeenth, century, equivalent, vasari, vite, vite,. Giovanni Pietro Bellori 15 January 1613 19 February 1696 7 also known as Giovan Pietro Bellori or Gian Pietro Bellori was an Italian art theorist painter and antiquarian who is best known for his work Lives of the Artists considered the seventeenth century equivalent to Vasari s Vite His Vite de Pittori Scultori et Architetti Moderni 8 published in 1672 was influential in consolidating and promoting the theoretical case for classical idealism in art 9 As an art historical biographer he favoured classicising artists rather than Baroque artists to the extent of omitting some of the key artistic figures of 17th century art altogether Giovanni Pietro BelloriGian Pietro Bellori portrait by Carlo MarattaBorn 1613 01 15 January 15 1613Rome Papal StatesDiedFebruary 19 1696 1696 02 19 aged 83 Rome Papal StatesResting placeChurch of S IsidoroOccupation s Biographer painter librarian art historian historian archaeologistKnown forLives of the ArtistsParent s Giacomo Bellori and Artemetia Bellori nee Giannotti Academic backgroundInfluencesPlato Aristotle Alberti Vasari Angeloni 1 Baglione 1 Agucchi 1 Academic workDisciplineClassical archaeology art history aestheticsInfluencedDryden 2 Aglionby 3 Winckelmann 1 4 Von Schlosser 5 Baeumler 6 Panofsky Contents 1 Biography 2 Works 3 Views 4 Archaeological work 5 List of works 6 References 7 External linksBiography editBellori was born in Rome on 15 January 1613 the son of Giacomo a farmer He was reared and educated by his maternal uncle Francesco Angeloni who was an antiquarian writer of comedies dialogues and operas a numismatist Historia Augusta 1641 and collector of art antiquities and natural history he had Correggio Bassano and Titian among his paintings Angeloni fostered in Bellori an interest in collecting and interpreting antiquities and indeed his interest in the antique was pivotal to his whole career 10 On his death in 1652 Angeloni designated Bellori as his sole heir but the will was invalidated by Angeloni s brothers who sold off most of the collection leaving Bellori with the house on the Pincio located on the via Orsina near the church of Sant Isidoro where he had grown up and in which he lived all his life Bellori had been keenly interested in art since childhood As a young man he took art lessons from the painter Domenichino Philip Skippon who visited Bellori in 1665 noted he draws pictures and makes good landskips and as late as 1689 when Bellori was admitted to the French Academy he was listed as a painter He became a member of the Accademia di San Luca by 1652 and was Secretary 1652 3 1666 and 1668 72 Bellori was a close friend of many artists including Nicolas Poussin Giovanni Angelo Canini Francois Duquesnoy Charles Alphonse du Fresnoy and Carlo Maratta 11 In the spring of 1661 he accompanied the representative of Louis XIV in Rome M Parisot on a long trip through Southern Italy He became a member of the French Academy in 1689 He was appointed Commissario delle Antichita by Pope Clement X on 31 May 1670 Bellori was librarian and antiquarian to Queen Christina of Sweden from 1677 to 1689 While serving Christina he certainly met Filippo Baldinucci the Florentine writer on art who visited Rome in 1681 on the occasion of the Queen s commission to him for a biography of Gian Lorenzo Bernini By 1695 Bellori was very ill suffering especially in his lower legs and had not left his house since mid 1694 He died on 19 February 1696 and was buried in the Church of S Isidoro Bellori lived on the Pincian Hill near S Isidoro where he rebuilt the dispersed collection of Angeloni Travellers diaries and guidebooks confirm that Bellori had assembled a small but well chosen gallery with works attributed to Titian Tintoretto Van Dyck Maratta and Annibale Carracci amongst others 10 After his death his collection was purchased by Frederick I of Prussia and Augustus III of Saxony Bellori s collection of ancient gems and medals found their way to Dresden where they helped shape J J Winckelmann s vision of antiquity 1 The famous French antiquarian Jacob Spon who met Bellori in Rome in 1675 considered him tres savant en toutes sortes d antiquites According to another famous visitor Bishop Gilbert Burnet Bellori is deservedly famous for his knowledge of the Greek and Egyptian antiquities and for all that belongs to the mythologies and superstitions of the Heathens Burnet included him in a list of the most learned men he met in Rome Raffaello Fabretti Honore Fabri Francesco Nazzari Cardinal Cesar d Estrees Cardinal Philip Howard and Ludovico Maracci 12 Bellori was one of the most important intellectuals of seventeenth century Italy He was the author of several learned archeological treatises widely respected by later antiquarians and reprinted in great part in the Thesaurus of Graevius and Gronovius His Nota dei Musei 1664 catalogued private and ecclesiastical libraries and collections in Rome and included the first detailed study of ancient painting His poem On Painting was published in 1642 to introduce Baglione s Lives Bellori s own Vite Lives 1672 a basic source for the history of 17th century art includes a selection of artists on whom he had been collecting material from the 1640s Some are Roman and others claimed for the Roman school and the biographies are introduced by a scholarly apologia on idealization His friend Carlo Maratta contributed funds for the posthumous publication of Bellori s Descrizzione delle imagini dipinte de Raffaelle d Urbino 1696 which describes Raphael Rooms in the Apostolic Palace and the Loggia of Cupid and Psyche in the Villa Farnesina Works editIn 1664 Bellori delivered an influential speech to the Accademia di San Luca on the Ideal in Art In 1672 he published this as a preface to his biographies of recent and contemporary artists entitled Le vite de pittori scultori et architetti moderni The lives of the modern painters sculptors and architects Since then it has acquired almost canonical status as one of the earliest declarations of the principles of Classicism 13 Bellori s Lives of the Artists is one of the foundational texts of the history and criticism of European art 14 It covers the brothers Annibale Carracci and Agostino Carracci Domenico Fontana Federico Barocci Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio Rubens Anthony van Dyck Francois Duquesnoy Domenico Zampieri il Domenichino Giovanni Lanfranco Alessandro Algardi and Nicolas Poussin Bellori planned a work on Bolognese artists but only completed entries for Guido Reni Andrea Sacchi and Carlo Maratta The life of Maratta was published in 1732 and the three biographies together edited from his manuscript in 1942 15 Views editIn Bellori s view the Renaissance ideal had been rescued from the tangled post Raphael and Michelangelo styles now known as Mannerism by the robust classicism of those following Annibale Carracci s lead 16 Bellori advocated idealism over realism or naturalism This famously led to Bellori s reverence of the painting of Annibale Carracci and repudiation of Caravaggio His writing of the Idea is influenced by Giovanni Battista Agucchi Vasari Leon Battista Alberti Aristotle and others In Bellori s Lives the artists he most admired were Domenichino and Nicolas Poussin his friend the sculptor Alessandro Algardi was praised while Bernini was not mentioned and he included the painters Andrea Sacchi and his pupil Carlo Maratta however he omitted Pietro da Cortona Bellori often relied for his facts on the earlier biographies of Roman artists by Giovanni Baglione Vasari s definition of disegno or design at that time seen as the most important artistic element is tied up in the concept of prudence An artist s work could essentially be seen as a series of choices and the wisdom of these choices was owed to the character or prudence of the artist This forms the basis of subsequent value judgments in art by Bellori and his contemporaries Bellori and Agucchi after Aristotle equated the practice of idealism with prudent choice and naturalism with poor prudence Archaeological work editBy the late 1660s Bellori assisted Leonardo Agostini in his duties as papal Commissario delle Antichita contributing much of the commentary to Agostini s gem collection 17 and in 1670 he took up the post himself holding it for the next 24 years while undertaking an astonishing programme of further publications These were at first sponsored by Cardinal Massimo one on the Severan Marble Plan 1673 perhaps illustrated by himself and one on Massimo s coin collection 1676 After Massimo s death in 1677 Bellori went on to catalogue rare coins in Cardinal Gaspare Carpegna s library and then those belonging to Queen Christina of Sweden for whom he also served as antiquario In collaboration with the printer Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi and the painter engraver Pietro Santi Bartoli 1635 1700 who had also worked for Massimo he produced a hugely successful series of corpora illustrated by Bartoli s engravings An edition of prints of ancient bas reliefs had already appeared by 1677 to be followed by the Column of Marcus Aurelius and its reliefs in 1679 the paintings in the Tomb of the Nasonii on the Via Flaminia discovered in 1674 published 1680 the triumphal arches of Rome in 1690 ancient funerary lamps in 1691 8 and ancient burials in 1697 18 Bellori was an exceptional antiquario by any definition Unlike him most seventeenth century antiquari published nothing and when they did like Agostini it was usually a promotional catalogue of their own collection or just one or two items from it Menestrier s one published work a study of the image Ephesian Diana based on examples in his own collection appeared close to twenty years after his death also benefiting from Bellori s ministrations List of works edit nbsp Columna Cochlis M Aurelio Antonino Augusto dicata Rome 1704 Giovanni Pietro Bellori Icones et segmenta illustrium e marmore tabularum quae Romae adhuc extant a Francisco Perrier delineata Parisiis 1645 Giovanni Pietro Bellori Il Bonino ovvero avvertimenti al Tristano intorno agli errori nelle medaglie del primo tomo de suoi Commentari historici s l circa 1649 difesa dell Angeloni attaccato per la Historia Augusta Giovanni Pietro Bellori Notae in numismata tum Ephesia tum aliarum urbium apibus insignita Romae 1658 rist con Expositio symbolici deae Syriae simulacri in Claude Francois Menestrier Symbolica Dianae Ephesiae statua Romae 1660 e 1688 e in Jakob Gronovius Thesaurus graecarum antiquitatum VII Venetiis 1735 Giovanni Pietro Bellori Pietro Santi Bartoli 1667 Colonna Traiana eretta dal senato e popolo romano all imperatore Traiano Augusto nel suo foro in Roma Scolpita con l historie della guerra dacica la prima e la seconda espeditione e vittoria contro il re Decebalo Nuovamente disegnata et intagliata da Pietro Santi Bartoli Con l espositione latina d Alfonso Ciaccone compendiata nella vulgare lingua sotto ciascuna immagine accresciuta di medaglie inscrittioni e trofei da Gio Pietro Bellori Rome Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi Bellori Giovanni Pietro 1672 Vite de Pittori Scultori et Architetti Moderni Parte Prima Rome Mascardi Giovanni Pietro Bellori 1673 Fragmenta vestigii veteris Romae ex lapidibus Farnesianis Nunc primum in Iucem edita cum notis Io Petri Bellorii in Latin Rome typis Iosephi Corvi sumptibus Ioannis Iacobi de Rubeis Giovanni Pietro Bellori e Pietro Santi Bartoli Columna Antoniniana Marci Aurelii Antonini Augusti Rebus Gestis Insignis Germanis Simul Et Sarmatis Gemino Bello Devictis Ex S C Romae In Antonini Foro Ad Via m Flaminia m Erecta Ac Utriusqve Belli Imaginibus Anaglyphice Insculpta Nunc Primum A Petro Sancti Bartolo Iuxta Delineationes In Bibliotheca Barberina Asservatas A Se Cum Antiquis Ipsius Columnae Signis Collatas Aere Incisa Et In Lucem Edita Cum Notis Excerptis Ex Declaralionibus Io Petri Bellorii Rome 1675 Imagines veterum philosophorum Rome 1685 Francesco Angeloni 1685 Giovanni Pietro Bellori ed La Historia Augusta Da Giulio Cesare infino a Costantino il Magno Illustrata Con la verita delle Antiche Medaglie 2 ed a spese di Felice Cesaretti libraro all Insegna della Regina Giovanni Pietro Bellori Pietro Santi Bartoli 1690 Veteres Arcus Augustorum triumphis insignes ex reliquiis quae Romae adhuc supersunt cum imaginibus triumphalibus restituti antiquis nummis notisque I Petri Bellorii illustrati in Latin Romae Ad templum Sanctae Mariae de Pace Giovanni Pietro Bellori Pietro Santi Bartoli 1691 Le antiche lucerne sepolcrali figurate raccolte dalle caue sotterranee e grotte di Roma nelle quali si contengono molte erudite memorie disegnate ed intagliate nelle loro forme da Pietro Santi Bartoli divise in tre parti con l osservationi di Gio Pietro Bellori Rome nella stamperia di Gio Francesco Buagni This work was translated into Latin by Alexander Duker and published at Leyden 1702 fol 19 Giovanni Pietro Bellori Pietro Santi Bartoli 1693 Admiranda Romanarum antiquitatum ac veteris sculpturae vestigia anaglyphico opere elaborata ex marmoreis exemplaribus quae Romae adhuc extant in Capitolio aedibus hortisque virorum principum ad antiquam elegantiam a Petro Sancti Bartolo delineata incisa In quibus plurima ac praeclarissima ad Romanam historiam veteres mores dignoscendos ob oculos ponuntur Notis Io Petri Bellorii illustrata in Latin Romae sumptibus ac typis edita a Joanne Jacobo de Rubeis Pietro Santi Bartoli Giovanni Pietro Bellori Gli antichi sepolcri overo mausolei romani trovati in Roma Roma Antonio de Rossi 1699 This work was translated into Latin by Alexander Duker and published at Leyden 1702 fol 20 Michel Ange de La Chausse Pietro Sante Bartoli Giovanni Pietro Bellori Francesco Bartoli 1738 Picturae antiquae cryptarum romanarum et sepulcri Nasonum in Latin Roma ex typographia S Michaelis ad Ripam References editNotes a b c d e Donahue 1965 George Alexander Kennedy H B Nisbet Claude Rawson Raman Selden eds 1989 The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Vol 4 Cambridge University Press p 110 ISBN 9780521317207 Malvasia Carlo Cesare 2000 Malvasia s Life of the Carracci Commentary and Translation Penn State Press p 37 ISBN 0 271 01899 2 Panofsky Erwin 1968 Idea a Concept in Art Theory University of South Carolina Press p 242 Bellori is the predecessor of Winckelmann not only as an antiquarian but also as an art theorist Winckelmann s theory of the ideally beautiful as he expounds it in Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums IV 2 33 ff thoroughly agrees except for the somewhat stronger Neoplatonic impact which is to be explained perhaps more as an influence of Raphael Mengs than as an influence of Shaftesbury with the content of Bellori s Idea to which Winckelmann also owes his acquaintance with the letters of Raphael and Guido Reni he frankly recognizes this indebtedness in Anmerkungen zur Geschichte der Kunst des Altertums 1767 p 36 Von Schlosser Julius Ritter 1924 Die Kunstliteratur Ein Handbuch zur Quellenkunde der neueren Kunstgeschichte Vienna Kunstverlag Anton Schroll amp Co p 423 Baeumler Alfred 1999 1934 Estetica Padova Edizioni di Ar p 124 Pace 1996 Bellori 1672 Wittkower 1999 vol 2 p 87 a b Sparti 2001 p 60 Cropper 2015 p 140 Burnet Gilbert 1686 Some Letters Containing an Account of what Seemed Most Remarkable in Switzerland Italy amp c Amsterdam Abraham Acher pp 230 232 Raben 2006 p 126 Cropper Elizabeth December 2006 Giovan Pietro Bellori the Lives of the Modern Painters Sculptors and Architects A New Translation and Critical Edition by Alice Sedgwick Wohl The Burlington Magazine 148 1245 854 JSTOR 20074653 Michelangelo Piacentini ed 1942 Le vite inedite del Bellori I Giovan Pietro Bellori vite di Guido Reni Andrea Sacchi e Carlo Maratti Rome Biblioteca d Arte Editrice He meant the classicising tendencies in Annibale s work the more exuberant tendencies were picked up on by Baroque artists such as Pietro da Cortona The work which grouped the gems according to the themes represented was translated into Latin by Jakob Gronovius and published in Amsterdam 1685 Claridge Amanda Archaeologies Antiquaries and the Memorie of Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Rome in Ilaria Bignamini ed Archives and Excavations Archaeological Monographs of the British School at Rome 14 2004 36 Jakob Gronovius ed 1702 Thesaurus antiquitatum graecarum Vol XII Leyden Petrus van der Aa Jakob Gronovius ed 1702 Thesaurus antiquitatum graecarum Vol XII Leyden Petrus van der Aa Bibliography Corpus informatico belloriano Archived 2014 04 24 at the Wayback Machine edited by Paola Barocchi Sonia Maffei Tomaso Montanari Centro di Ricerche Informatiche per i Beni Culturali della Scuola Normale di Pisa Heres Gerald 1979 Winckelmann Bernini Bellori Betrachtungen zur Nachahmung der Alten Forschungen und Berichte 19 9 16 doi 10 2307 3880817 JSTOR 3880817 Perini Giovanna 1989 L arte di descrivere La tecnica dell ecfrasi in Malvasia e Bellori I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 3 175 206 doi 10 2307 4603664 JSTOR 4603664 S2CID 178550112 Haskell Francis 1993 Chapter 6 Patrons and Painters Art and Society in Baroque Italy 1980 Yale University Press pp 158 161 Pace Claire 1996 Bellori Giovanni Pietro In Jane Turner ed The Dictionary of Art Vol 3 London Macmillan pp 673 675 ISBN 9780333749395 Wittkower Rudolf 1999 Art and Architecture in Italy 1600 1750 sixth edition in 3 volumes revised by Joseph Connors and Jennifer Montagu New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 9780300078909 Sparti Donatella Livia 2001 Giovan Pietro Bellori and Annibale Carracci s Self Portraits From the Vite to the Artist s Funerary Monument Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz 45 1 2 60 101 JSTOR 27654540 Raben Hans 2006 Bellori s Art The Taste and Distaste of a Seventeenth Century Art Critic in Rome Simiolus Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art 32 2 3 126 146 JSTOR 20355327 Keazor Henry 2008 Spirito abile ed Elevatissimo ingegno Giovan Pietro Bellori e Carlo Cesare Malvasia Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz 52 1 73 82 JSTOR 30249347 Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History 2010 Commentary on Annibale Carracci Introduces Painting to Apollo and Minerva etching by Pietro Aquila 1640 1692 1700 after a drawing by Carlo Maratti frontispiece to Galeriae Farnesianae Icones a catalogue of Carracci s Palazzo Farnese drawings published by Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi in 1674 with a text by Giovanni Pietro Bellori Metropolitan Museum of Art website accessed 3 March 2015 Cotensin Ismene 2021 Les Vite de Giovanni Pietro Bellori 1672 entre valorisation et dispersion du patrimoine vasarien LECEMO les Cultures de l Europe Mediterraneenne Occidentale Sorbonne Nouvelle External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Giovanni Pietro Bellori Donahue Kenneth 1965 BELLORI Giovanni Pietro Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 7 Bartolucci Bellotto in Italian Rome Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana ISBN 978 8 81200032 6 Langdon Helen 2001 Bellori Giovanni Pietro The Oxford Companion to Western Art Oxford University Press Retrieved 10 July 2023 Chiarelli Francesca 2002 Bellori Giovan Pietro The Oxford Companion to Italian Literature Oxford University Press Retrieved 10 July 2023 Cropper Elizabeth 2015 Giovanni Pietro Bellori In Nancy Thomson de Grummond ed Encyclopedia of the History of Classical Archaeology Routledge pp 140 142 ISBN 9781134268542 Erwin Panofsky Idea A Concept in Art Theory at Art History Resources Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giovanni Pietro Bellori amp oldid 1173510379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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