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Desiderio da Settignano

(b Settignano, nr Florence, 1429-32; d Florence, bur 16 Jan 1464). Italian sculptor. His career lasted only about 12 years, but during that time he produced some of the most delicate and intimate sculptural works of mid-15th-century Florence. There are problems of dating and attribution even with his partially documented works, and records survive of several unidentifiable commissions; consequently, it is difficult to chart the course of his stylistic development, and the reliefs and portrait busts attributed to him are grouped around two works: the tomb of Carlo Marsuppini (Florence, Santa Croce) and the sacrament tabernacle (Florence, S Lorenzo).

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Biography: Desiderio da Settignano

The short working career of the Italian sculptor Desiderio da Settignano (1428-1464) was entirely centered in Florence. He was one of the most sensitive carvers of marble, especially in his images of children, in the history of this medium.

Desiderio da Settignano was born in Settignano, the youngest of three sons of a mason, Bartolommeo di Francesco. All three sons joined the sculptors' guild in Florence; Desiderio matriculated in 1453. In 1456 Desiderio and his older brother, Gero, rented a studio in Florence. There are few certain details recorded of Desiderio's earlier training and later life. He must have been influenced by Donatello, but scholars now believe that Desiderio's actual training was under Bernardo Rossellino, with whom he may have worked on the tomb of Beata Villana in S. Maria Novella before 1451.

Desiderio must have had an established reputation by 1453, since he was then awarded the important commission for the tomb of the humanist scholar and state chancellor of Florence, Carlo Marsuppini, in Sta Croce. The date of completion of this monument is not known, nor is it certain when Desiderio began his second major project, the Tabernacle of the Sacrament in S. Lorenzo, but this was surely in place by 1461. The charming frieze of putti heads on the exterior of the Pazzi Chapel was probably completed in 1461. According to Giorgio Vasari, Desiderio's last work was the painted wooden statue of St. Mary Magdalene, left unfinished and completed by Benedetto da Maiano after Desiderio's death in 1464.

From the outset Desiderio's talent was distinct, assured, and very rare. His Marsuppini tomb, planned to balance Bernardo Rossellino's tomb of Leonardo Bruni on the opposite wall of Sta Croce, is at once a harmonious counterpart to its model and an independent achievement, animating and enriching the sober, dignified characterization of the deceased with the grace notes of an ornamental setting in which every detail is chiseled with an incomparable combination of featherlike delicacy and prismatic precision and strength.

The same seemingly effortless ease controls the astonishing inventions of Desiderio's Tabernacle of the Sacrament and invests his smaller separate reliefs and images, whether of the infant Christ Child or the aged St. Jerome, with a serene radiance that never degenerates into sentimentality and is never reduced to a formula. His subtle variations of expression, type, and design give such traditional themes as the Madonna and Child or youthful angels a new grace and humanity.

Further Reading

The quality of Desiderio's sculpture can be appreciated in Clarence Kennedy's sensitive photographs in Studies in the History and Criticism of Sculpture, vol. 5: The Tabernacle of the Sacrament, by Desiderio da Settignano (1929). Both John Pope-Hennessy, Introduction to Italian Sculpture, vol. 2: Italian Renaissance Sculpture (1958); and Charles Seymour, Jr., Sculpture in Italy: 1400-1500 (1966), include important critical estimates of Desiderio's work.

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Desiderio da Settignano

(born c. 1430, Settignano, republic of Florence — died January 1464, Florence) Italian sculptor. Born into a family of stonemasons, he entered the Stone and Wood Carvers' Guild of Florence in 1453. He based his style on Donatello's work of the 1430s, and his skill as a marble cutter established him as a master of bas-relief. His delicate, sensitive, original technique was best expressed in portrait busts of women and children. His most important public work was the tomb of Carlo Marsuppini in the church of Santa Croce; the tomb's rich architectural detail makes it one of the most outstanding of all Florentine wall monuments.

For more information on Desiderio da Settignano, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Desiderio da Settignano
(dāzēdĕ'rēō dä sĕt'tēnyä') , c.1429–64, Florentine sculptor, a follower of Donatello. His exquisitely delicate marble carving is best seen in his church decorations, bas-reliefs, and busts of women and children. Two bas-reliefs in American collections, Young St. John the Baptist (National Gallery, Washington, D.C.) and “Foulc” Madonna and Child (Philadelphia Mus. of Art), are characteristic of his style and charm. Two of his Florentine works, the tomb of Carlo Marsuppini in the Church of Santa Croce and a tabernacle in the Balsilica of San Lorenzo, are among the most beautiful of early Renaissance monuments. The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., has several examples of his work.
 
Wikipedia: Desiderio da Settignano

Desiderio da Settignano, real name Desiderio de Bartolomeo di Francesco detto Ferro (c. 14301464) was an Italian sculptor active during the Renaissance.

Biography

He came from a family of stone carvers and stone masons in Settignano, near Florence. His work shows the influence of Donatello, specifically his use of low reliefs.

During 1450 to 1455 he finished a frieze with cherubims in the Pazzi Chapel of Santa Croce in Florence. In 1453 he matriculated from the Guild of Stone and Wood Craftsmen of the city, and later executed the tomb of chancellor Carlo Marsuppini in the same church, inspired by Bernardo Rossellino's tomb of Leonardo Bruni. It shows the dead lying on the sarcophagus, with a triumphal arch, supported by pilasters, hanging over him. From about 1455 is the bust of Marietta Strozzi, now in Berlin, and a Maledeine in polychrome wood, for the church of Santa Trinita in Florence; the latter's soft rendering has been favourably compared to the seemingly ageing of the contemporary Donatello's work.

In 1461 he finished a tabernacle for the Sacrament Chapel in San Lorenzo.

He died in Florence in 1464. The most famous of his pupils is Simone Ferrucci.

Giorgio Vasari includes a biography of Desiderio da Settignano in his Lives of the Artists[1].

Jesus and John.
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Jesus and John.

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Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Desiderio da Settignano" Read more

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