Luca
Signorelli
(b Cortona, c. 1450; d between Oct and Dec
1523).
Italian painter and draughtsman. Overcoming the handicap of lifelong
residence in the provincial town of Cortona, in the 1480s he obtained
early recognition as a leading artist in central Italy from fellow
artists and major patrons, including Pope Sixtus IV and Lorenzo de’
Medici. Yet rapid evolution of taste, dominated by a sense of constant
progress in truth to nature, led to his eclipse, beginning in the 1490s,
together with his contemporaries Botticelli and Perugino, in favour of
younger masters such as Filippino Lippi and Leonardo da Vinci. He was
still respected for his skill in anatomical drawing and the expressive
and dramatic effects for which he used it; this most notably produced
Michelangelo’s homage to Signorelli (Vasari reported that Michelangelo
praised his frescoes at Orvieto highly and borrowed certain motifs from
them for his Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel, Rome).