The High Renaissance
 
&

Mannerism
 

   

 


 
 

 
Bronzino

 

 
 

Agnolo Bronzino

born November 17, 1503, Monticelli, duchy of Milan [Italy]
died November 23, 1572, Florence


original name Agnolo , or Agniolo, Di Cosimo Florentine painter whose polished and elegant portraits are outstanding examples of the Mannerist style. These works are classic embodiments of thecourtly ideal under the Medici dukes of the mid-16th century; they influenced European court portraiture for the next century.

Bronzino was greatly influenced by the work of his teacher, the Florentine painter Jacopo da Pontormo. Bronzino adapted his master's eccentric, expressive style (early Mannerism) to create a brilliant, precisely linear style of his own that was also partly influenced by Michelangelo and the late works of Raphael. Bronzino served as the court painter to Cosimo I, duke of Florence, from 1539 until his death. His portraits, such as “Portrait of Eleanor of Toledo with Her Son Giovanni” (Uffizi, Florence), are preeminent examples of Mannerist portraiture: emotionally inexpressive, reserved, and noncommittal, yet arrestingly elegant and decorative. Bronzino's great technical proficiency and his stylized rounding of sinuous anatomical forms are also notable. He also painted sacred and allegorical works of distinction, suchas “The Allegory of Luxury,” or “Venus, Cupid, Folly, and Time” (c. 1546; National Gallery, London), which reveals his love of complex symbolism, contrived poses, and clear, brilliant colours.

 

 

 

Eleonora of Toledo with her son Giovanni de' Medici
1544-45
Oil on wood, 115 x 96 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence

 
 

 


Bia, The Illegitimate Daughter of Cosimo I de' Medici

c. 1542
Oil on wood, 63 x 48 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence
 

 
 


Holy Family

c. 1540
Oil on wood, 117 x 93 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence


 


Holy Family

1534-40
Oil on wood, 124,5 x 99,5 cm
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna


 


Portrait of Ludovico Capponi

1551
Oil on wood, 117 x 86 cm
Frick Collection, New York


 

Portrait of a Lady

c. 1550
Oil on wood, 109 x 85 cm
Galleria Sabauda, Turin
 

 


The Holy Family
1527
National Gallery of Art, Washington,