Italian painter Giovanni Bellini [1430-1516)] was the founder of the Venetian
school of painting and raised Venice to a center of Renaissance art that
rivaled Florence and Rome. He brought to painting a new degree of realism, a
new wealth of subject matter, and a new sensuousness in form and color.
Perhaps more than any other, Giovanni Bellini [Giambellino] was an artist who passed through different periods and cultural revolutions.
Perhaps more than any other, Giovanni Bellini [Giambellino] was an artist who passed through different periods and cultural revolutions.
He,
before Leonardo, was the great inventor of the representation of sentiment
and nature, painting works of extraordinary poetry, landscapes that brought
together everything that had been seen until then in Italy and Europe, with the
human figure totally immersed in the surrounding space. These moving, deeply
felt scenes are also intimately Venetian - in the softness of the light, in the
sober realism of the men and women, in the taste for details of vegetation
described in a single botanic identity.
Masterpieces,
obtained by transforming every technical element: Giambellino took his first
steps in tempera and went on to develop such a sophisticated use of oil that he
could knead the forms of the onlookers, although volumetrically solid, with
architectural structures and backdrops in the first Italian example of a
"modern" use of the technique imported from Flanders.
A big
retrospective on Giovanni Bellini has never been attempted, just as for
Antonello da Messina, because it is considered such a difficult undertaking.
His only solo exhibition was curated by Rodolfo Pallucchini in 1949. It was
held in Venice and gathered together about fifty works, mostly from collections
in Veneto or Italy, giving an image of the painter that needs to be completely
reviewed to take into account the findings of more recent studies.
Giovanni
Bellini first began painting in Oil when the Sicilian painter Antonello da
Messina (1430-1479), came to see the work of Bellini. It is said that Messina
had a crucial role in introducing Oil painting to the Venetians. With this
Bellini’s religious works took on a new life, closer to the vivid, but flowing,
colors that became so distinct of the Venetians. Often collaborating with his
brother Gentile, Giovanni executed some of his best work in place of Gentile
for a commission at the Palazzo Ducale di Venezia, or Doge’s Palace in Venice.
Sadly, a great deal of work here was lost to fire in 1577.
After his
work in Doge’s Palace, Bellini went on to paint works that would define a
stylistic transition into the High Renaissance. This included his Barbarigo
Altarpiece, known as Madonna with Doge Agostino Barbarigo in the Chiesa di San
Zaccaria (Church of Saint Zacharias) in Venice. Bellini executed many works
throughout Venice, mostly Religious in subject matter, but also portraits. One
of his Portraits of a Young Man is now in the Uffizi Gallery, where there is
also his piece, Lamentation, attributed under the name Giambellino. There is
also his beautifully landscaped piece, Allegory, in the Uffizi. Bellini was
well known for bringing attention to detail in is landscape backgrounds, which
would also influence this innovation in the Venetian School.
In his later work Bellini began to paint mythological subjects as well, including his last unfinished piece, The Feast of the Gods, which Titian completed. The work was commissioned by the Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso I d’Este (1476-1534), for the Castello Estense (Castle of Estense or Este Castle).
In his later work Bellini began to paint mythological subjects as well, including his last unfinished piece, The Feast of the Gods, which Titian completed. The work was commissioned by the Duke of Ferrara, Alfonso I d’Este (1476-1534), for the Castello Estense (Castle of Estense or Este Castle).
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Wonderful works
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