The High Renaissance
 
&

Mannerism


   

 

 
 
 

 

Lorenzo Costa

 

 
 
Lorenzo Costa

born c. 1460, Ferrara, Duchy of Ferrara [Italy]
died March 5, 1535, Mantua, Duchy of Mantua [Italy]

Painter of the school of Ferrara-Bologna, notable as one of the first Ferrarese artists to adopt a soft, atmospheric style of painting.
Costa was trained at Ferrara, probably under Cosme Tura, who was the first important native-born Ferrarese painter. From at least 1485 he worked at Bologna in close connection with Francia, the major Bolognese artist of the period, who led him to soften his style and eliminate his native robustness. His best works are several altarpieces in the churches of Bologna.
In 1506, soon after the expulsion of the ruling Bentivoglio family from Bologna, he was summoned as court painter to Mantua to succeed Andrea Mantegna. He had already painted (1504–06) one elaborate allegory for the Marchesa of Mantua. He spent his last years in the service of the Gonzagas, doing religious and historical pictures.
  

 


Portrait of Battista Fiera
about 1507-8

 

 
 


Sainte Veronique
1508

 


Portrait of Giovanni Bentivoglio

c. 1492
Tempera on wood, 55 x 49 cm
Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence

 

St Jerome

1485
Panel
S. Petronio, Bologna

 

The Adoration of the Shepherds with Angels
about 1499

 

The Story of Moses (The Dance of Miriam)
after 1508

 

The Virgin and Child with Saints Peter, Philip, John the Evangelist and John the Baptist
1505

 

The Virgin and Child Enthroned between a Soldier Saint and Saint John the Baptist
1499
   
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