Pellegrino Tibaldi

Italian painter
Also known as: Il Pellegrini, Pellegrino Pellegrini, Pellegrino da Bologna, Peregrinus de Peregrinis
Quick Facts
Also called:
Il Pellegrini
Born:
1527, Puria, duchy of Milan [Italy]
Died:
April 27, 1596, Milan (aged 69)
Movement / Style:
Mannerism

Pellegrino Tibaldi (born 1527, Puria, duchy of Milan [Italy]—died April 27, 1596, Milan) was an Italian painter, sculptor, and architect who spread the style of Italian Mannerist painting in Spain during the late 16th century.

Tibaldi grew up in Bologna in a family of Lombard stonemasons. He was trained as a painter under minor Emilian artists who imitated the style of Raphael. His early paintings seem to reflect the influence of a number of artists. The classical style of Mystic Marriage of St. Catherine (c. 1545) brings to mind Raphael, or even Parmigianino. The Adoration of the Shepherds (c. 1546), one of Tibaldi’s earliest-known paintings, shows the influence of Michelangelo and possibly Giorgio Vasari. His later works reveal the influence of Niccolò dell’Abate.

About 1547 Tibaldi went to Rome to work with Perino del Vaga. Together they decorated the living quarters of Pope Paul III in the Castel Sant’Angelo (1545–49). Upon the pope’s death in 1549, Tibaldi assisted in decorating his funeral. While in Rome he also decorated the villa of Giovanni Poggi (c. 1550) as well as a room in the Vatican (1551–52) for Julius III. Tibaldi was in Loreto in 1554 to decorate the chapel of St. John the Baptist (now chapel of the Assumption). When he returned to Bologna about 1555, he revealed his talent in decorative painting at the Palazzo Poggi (now the University of Bologna). The series of frescoes he painted depict themes as varied as The Life of St. Paul and scenes from The Odyssey. He also created a set of male nudes similar to those Michelangelo had painted on the Sistine Chapel ceiling. He then completed several architectural projects in Bologna, Pavia, Milan, and other Italian cities.

"The Birth of Venus," tempera on canvas by Sandro Botticelli, c. 1485; in the Uffizi, Florence.
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In 1587 Tibaldi answered the summons of Philip II of Spain to supervise the decorating of the Escorial Library near Madrid. While there, he painted 46 frescoes in the cloister alone, executed many sculptural projects, and superintended the architectural details. Rich and ennobled, Tibaldi returned to Milan in 1596 at the summons of the archbishop, Federico, who wanted help with his new plan for the city, but he died shortly after his arrival.

Tibaldi’s use of figures in violent and artificial poses is similar to that of Giulio Romano. The decorative, audacious, and absurd poses of his earlier figures are repeated in his frescoes for the Escorial. Tibaldi’s architectural work is regarded as competent but unoriginal.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.
Italian:
Manierismo
Related Topics:
art
maniera

Mannerism, (from maniera, “manner,” or “style”), artistic style that predominated in Italy from the end of the High Renaissance in the 1520s to the beginnings of the Baroque style around 1590. The Mannerist style originated in Florence and Rome and spread to northern Italy and, ultimately, to much of central and northern Europe. The term was first used around the end of the 18th century by the Italian archaeologist Luigi Lanzi to define 16th-century artists who were the followers of major Renaissance masters.

Mannerism originated as a reaction to the harmonious classicism and the idealized naturalism of High Renaissance art as practiced by Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael in the first two decades of the 16th century. In the portrayal of the human nude, the standards of formal complexity had been set by Michelangelo, and the norm of idealized beauty by Raphael. But in the work of these artists’ Mannerist successors, an obsession with style and technique in figural composition often outweighed the importance and meaning of the subject matter. The highest value was instead placed upon the apparently effortless solution of intricate artistic problems, such as the portrayal of the nude in complex and artificial poses.

Mannerist artists evolved a style that is characterized by artificiality and artiness, by a thoroughly self-conscious cultivation of elegance and technical facility, and by a sophisticated indulgence in the bizarre. The figures in Mannerist works frequently have graceful but queerly elongated limbs, small heads, and stylized facial features, while their poses seem difficult or contrived. The deep, linear perspectival space of High Renaissance painting is flattened and obscured so that the figures appear as a decorative arrangement of forms in front of a flat background of indeterminate dimensions. Mannerists sought a continuous refinement of form and concept, pushing exaggeration and contrast to great limits. The results included strange and constricting spatial relationships, jarring juxtapositions of intense and unnatural colors, an emphasis on abnormalities of scale, a sometimes totally irrational mix of classical motifs and other visual references to the antique, and inventive and grotesque pictorial fantasies.

James Paine and Robert Adam: Kedleston Hall
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Western architecture: Mannerism

Mannerist elements are already present in some of Raphael’s later paintings done in Rome, notably the Transfiguration (1517–20), depicting the Transfigurationof Christ. In the period from 1515 to 1524 the Florentine painters Rosso Fiorentino and Jacopo da Pontormo broke away from Renaissance classicism and evolved an expressive, emotionally agitated style in their religious compositions. Among the most notable of these early Mannerist works are Pontormo’s Visdomini altarpiece (1518) in the Church of San Michele Visdomini, Florence, and Rosso’s Deposition from the Cross (1521). In the early 1520s Rosso journeyed to Rome, where he joined the artists Giulio Romano, Perino del Vaga, and Polidoro da Caravaggio, who had all been followers of Raphael in his work for the Vatican. The Mannerist style completely emerged in the paintings of these artists as well as in those of Parmigianino. The latter’s Madonna with the Long Neck (1534–40), Rosso’s Dead Christ with Angels (c. 1526), and Pontormo’s Deposition (1525–28) are preeminent works of Mannerism’s maturity. Michelangelo’s huge fresco The Last Judgment (1536–41) in the Sistine Chapel shows strong Mannerist tendencies in its agitated composition, formless and indeterminate space, and in the tortured poses and exaggerated musculature of its bunches of nude figures.

The sophisticated Mannerism that developed in Rome before 1527 became the chief formative influence on the styles of a number of younger Italian painters who were active during the 1530s, ’40s, and ’50s. Among them were Giorgio Vasari, Daniele da Volterra, Francesco Salviati, Domenico Beccafumi, Federico Zuccari, Pellegrino Tibaldi, and most notably Bronzino, who was the pupil of Pontormo and who became the most important Mannerist painter in Florence at this time. Meanwhile, Mannerism had begun to spread outside Italy; Rosso took the style to France in 1530 and was followed there two years later by Francesco Primaticcio, who evolved an important French variant of Mannerism in his decorations done at the French royal court at Fontainebleau. Mannerism was transplanted and disseminated throughout central and northern Europe around mid-century through large numbers of engravings of Italian paintings and through the visits of northern artists to Rome to study. Bartholomaeus Spranger, Hendrik Goltzius, and Hans von Aachen became important Mannerist painters. Although the Dutch cities of Haarlem and Amsterdam became centers of the new style, the most ambitious patronage was practiced at Prague by the Emperor Rudolf II; Spranger and others who worked for Rudolf evolved a Mannerism that occasionally generated into the grotesque and inexplicable.

In sculpture, the serpentine complexity of Michelangelo’s late sculptures, as epitomized in the sinuously spiraling form of his Victory (1532–34), dominated Mannerist aspirations in this medium. The sculptors Bartolommeo Ammannati, Benvenuto Cellini, and, most importantly, Giambologna became the principal practitioners of Mannerism with their graceful and complexly posed statues.

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Mannerism retained a high level of international popularity until the paintings of Annibale Carracci and of Caravaggio around 1600 brought the style to an end and ushered in the Baroque. Mannerism was for long afterward looked down upon as a decadent and anarchic style that simply marked a degeneration of High Renaissance artistic production. But in the 20th century the style came to be appreciated anew for its technical bravura, elegance, and polish. Mannerism’s spiritual intensity, its complex and intellectual aestheticism, its experimentation in form, and the persistent psychological anxiety manifested in it made the style attractive and interesting to the modern temperament, which saw affinities between it and modern expressionist tendencies in art.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.