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Andrea Pozzo

(b Trento, 30 Nov 1642; d Vienna, 31 Aug 1709). Italian painter, architect and stage designer. He was a brilliant quadratura painter, whose most celebrated works, such as the decoration of the church of S Ignazio in Rome, unite painting, architecture and sculpture in effects of overwhelming illusionism and are among the high-points of Baroque church art. He was a Jesuit lay brother and produced his most significant work for the Society of Jesus. This affiliation was fundamental to his conception of art and to his heightened awareness of the artist's role as instrumental in proclaiming the faith and stimulating religious fervour. The methods he used were those of Counter-Reformation rhetoric, as represented in Ignatius Loyola's Spirited Exercises (1548). His architectural works are eclectic, and his unconventional combination of varied sources led to bold experiments with both space and structure. His ideas were spread by his highly successful two-volume treatise, Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum (1693-1700).

See the Abbreviations for further details.



 
 
Biography: Andrea Pozzo

Andrea Pozzo, S.J. (1642-1709), a Jesuit coadjutor brother, was a tremendously multitalented artist. He worked as an architect, decorator, painter, and art theoretician; he was also one of the most noteworthy artists of the Baroque period. He is noted for developing quadratura painting, using a system of perspective in which the focal lines start at the corners of each piece and meet in the center vanishing point, making the painting appear almost three-dimensional in appearance, and his two-volume "Tractus perspectivae pictorum et architectorum"was one of the earliest-known books written on perspectives. Pozzo was best known for applying his knowledge of perspectives to design artwork for the cupola, the apse, and the ceiling of the St. Ignatius Church in Rome, and his style was subsequently copied in churches throughout Europe.

Pozzo was born in Trento, Italy on November 30, 1642. While growing up he studied both art and religion. He was a novice at the order of Discalced Carmelites at Convento delle Laste, near Trento from 1661 to 1662, before he moved to Milan in 1665 and became a Jesuit lay brother. Pozzo was encouraged by his Jesuit masters to continue with his painting, as his talent was seen as a gift from God. He started creating religious decorations for various sites throughout the city and his fame soon spread. In 1675 Pozzo was asked to visit the city of Turin, where he designed, among other things, the frescoes at the Chiesa del SS. Martiri; he also designed frescoes at the church of San Francisco Saverio in Modovi.

Most critics agree that Pozzo's early works give only a hint of his later accomplishments, but they showed enough promise to induce Gian Paolo Oliva, the Father-General of the Jesuit Society of Jesus, to invite Pozzo to Rome to do commissioned artwork for him there. The invitation was encouraged by Carlo Maratti, one of the most prominent painters in Rome at the time and was delivered in 1681. Maratti had seen Pozzo's work and greatly admired it. While Oliva died later that year, Pozzo was welcomed nevertheless to Rome by Oliva's successor. In Rome the young artist was given a myriad of ornamental tasks, including altarpiece paintings, altar designs, and festival designs, as well as some large-scale architectural paintings. He quickly became well known throughout the Jesuit order, both in Italy and even abroad, although he remained mainly out of the public eye and was not particularly well-known in the secular Roman world.

Painted St. Ignatius Church

One of the best-known and remarkable of Pozzo's works in Rome are his paintings done using the quadratura perspective for the ceiling and walls of St. Ignatius Church. Quadratura presented a grand architectural realm beyond the real space of the church, making the picture seem three-dimensional and the space of the church seem larger. The chief architect of St. Ignatius Church in Rome, Horace Grassi, S.J., had initially intended to build a cupola at the front of the church over the altar area, but died before he was able to even begin it. No one else had taken up his goal because the money that had been put aside for the cupola had been used up. The Jesuit Order turned to Pozzo, known for his perspective paintings, to come to their aid. He began work on the ceiling in October of 1684; the Jesuit's deadline of the feast day of St. Ignatius in the very next year, July 31, 1685, gave Pozzo only ten months to complete his masterpiece.

Pozzo not only made the deadline, but he painted such a work of art that all who entered the church were amazed by the painting's beauty and its interesting three-dimensional effect. On the enormous, flat ceiling of the St. Ignatius Church, Pozzo had painted a fresco of the missionary spirit of the Jesuit Society. The gorgeous ceiling was intended to commemorate two centuries of Jesuit explorers and missionaries. The effect was tromp l'oil; when looking up at the cupola viewers can see what look like pillars holding up a ceiling, and between the pillars Pozzo painted windows. In the middle of this, against the ceiling, as it were, that God, Jesus, and Ignatius are floating. Pozzo also installed a circle of red marble on the floor of St. Ignatius Church to mark the focal point for best viewing the ceiling. However, no matter where anyone stood, Pozzo's painting drew the eye upward. Many of those who attended the church the day the painting was unveiled were unable to tell that the ceiling was an optical illusion - that it was a painting and not an actual cupola. Many other artists have since come to Rome to scrutinize Pozzo's work and have used his technique in their own works on perspective. After a few centuries of smoke from candle wax, along with water and other damage, the painting became damaged and difficult to see, but was finally restored in 1962.

After his success with the ceiling of St. Ignatius Church, Pozzo was asked to decorate the apse, the nave vault fresco, and the pendentives, the triangular sections of vaulting between the rim of the dome and the adjacent pair of arches that supports it. For the nave he again used the quadratura technique. For the nave Pozzo painted an allegory of the Jesuit missions through the agency of St. Ignatius. Ignatius floats in heaven where he accepts a great beam of divine light from the Trinity which he then deflects to the four corners of the world, these represented by allegorical figures of the four continents known at the time the painting was rendered. Through this painting Pozzo once again celebrated the missionary activities of the Jesuit society and its founder, Ignatius. Pozzo's decoration of St. Ignatius Church, as well as Il Gesu, set a benchmark for late baroque church art throughout Europe.

Wrote Tractus perspectivae pictorum et architectorum

Besides his painting and other commissioned works, Pozzo began in the 1690s to write a explanatory book about his experiences with painting and architecture, and especially his work with perspective. The work, Tractus perspectivae pictorum et architectorum, was published in two volumes, the first of which appeared in 1693 and the second of which appeared in 1698. In this work Pozzo includes designs for altars, tabernacles, ephemeral structures for festivals, and church designs, as well as techniques for making a regular stage look like an irregular space by using wings obliquely.

In fact, even three centuries after Pozzo developed his work principle, filmmakers were still using his perspective principles to set up shots in their movies. In Pozzo's own day the Perspectiva enjoyed much popularity in artistic circles and was a great influence on architects throughout Europe. At a time when developments in printing technology had allowed books to be more commonplace, the popularity of his work caused it to be translated into German, English, Flemish, and even Chinese. Perhaps promoting his book, Pozzo claimed that anyone who had a familiarity with perspective and quadratura could be an architect.

Invited to Vienna

In 1704, with his renown growing as a result of his book and his frescoes at St. Ignatius Church, Pozzo was invited by Emperor Leopold I to move to Vienna to work for the royal court. In that northern city he worked for the emperor, as well as for Prince Johann Adam von Liechtenstein and various religious orders and churches. He also continued to work for the Jesuit Order, often traveling to other places in northern Europe to fulfill obligations to the Jesuits. Most of Pozzo's artistic works at this time, unfortunately, were installed in churches and other buildings that have since been destroyed. The best-known surviving object to reveal Pozzo's efforts in northern Europe is not a religious item at all, but rather a fresco of the Triumph of Hercules, done in the quadratura style, on the ceiling of the Liechtenstein Palace. This fresco is similar to the one Pozzo created at St. Ignatius Church, but there are a few differences. His work had matured by this point and he was experimenting with different ways to improve perspective. In the Triumph of Hercules the figures are smaller, they are not as firmly arranged, and they all appear to be floating, giving the viewer an even greater feeling of distance and space. A few of his altarpieces in Vienna also survived into the 21st century.

Despite its importance in the development of Western art, Pozzo's work has not been widely studied in recent years, perhaps because the multiple locations in which he worked required much travel, as well as the fact that some of his work has been lost. While most of Pozzo's works involved Catholic and particularly Jesuit themes, he is indebted to the theatre; through his art he constructed large dramas featuring tradition stage devices - a proscenium arch, a curtain, a backdrop - and positioned his religious figures as actors against these dramatically painted backgrounds. While Pozzo is not widely studied, his innovations regarding perspective continue to show their influences, marking them as foundational to much of modern design.

Books

International Dictionary of Architects and Architecture, St. James Press, 1993.

International Dictionary of Art and Artists, St. James Press, 1990.

Periodicals

Apollo, November, 2003.

Online

"Pozzo, Andrea," Fine Arts in Hungary,http://hungart.euroweb.hu/english/p/pozzo/ (November 14, 2004).

"Andrea Pozzo," World Wide Art Resources,http://wwar.com/masters/p/pozzo-andrea.html (November 14, 2004).

 

(1642–1709)

Italian lay Jesuit who was one of the greatest Baroque painters of ceilings that exploited illusion and high drama. His best works were in Sant'Ignazio, Rome (1684–94—perhaps the finest ceiling of quadratura ever created), San Francesco Saverio, Mondovi (1676–9), and the Gartenpalais Liechtenstein, Vienna (1704–8). In 1703 he settled in Vienna, where he created a sumptuous Baroque interior at the Universitätskirche (University Church—1703–9). His work was influential in disseminating the Baroque style in Central Europe, especially through his Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum (Perspective in drawing and architecture—1693–1700), which was translated into several languages, including Chinese. He designed several churches and altars, e.g. the stupendous altar of Sant'Ignazio, Il Gesù, Rome (1695–9), the high-altar of the Franziskanerkirche (Franciscan Church), Vienna (1706), the Church of Sant'Ignazio, Dubrovnik, Croatia (1699–1725), and the Cathedral, Ljubljana, Slovenia (1700–5).

Bibliography

  • Carboneri (ed.) (1961)
  • Feo (1988)
  • Feo &Martinelli (1996)
  • B. Kerber (1971)
  • Marini (1959)
  • Matteucci et al. (1979)
  • Placzek (ed.) (1982)
  • Portoghesi (1970)
  • Jane Turner (1996)
  • Wittkower (1982)
  • Wittkower &Jaffé (eds.) (1972)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Pozzo, Andrea dal
(ändrĕ'ä däl pŏt'tsō) , 1647–1709, Italian painter. Pozzo was a Jesuit priest and leading exponent of the baroque style. He was celebrated for his bold foreshortening and quadratura perspective, in which the lines of focus begin at the corners of the work and converge at a central vanishing point. Pozzo painted church ceilings (e.g., Sant' Ignazio in Rome, 1688) with seemingly endless heavenly vistas. His illusionism influenced Solimena and Tiepolo and his treatise on perspective (1692–97) spread understanding of his techniques throughout Europe.
 
Wikipedia: Andrea Pozzo
Andrea Pozzo's painted ceiling in the Church of St. Ignazio.
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Andrea Pozzo's painted ceiling in the Church of St. Ignazio.

Andrea Pozzo (Latinized version: Andreas Puteus; November 30, 1642,Trento, Italy - August 31, 1709, Vienna, Austria) was an Italian Jesuit Brother, Baroque painter and architect, decorator, stage designer, and art theoretician. He was best known for his grandiose frescoes using illusionistic technique called quadratura, in which architecture and fancy are intermixed. His masterpiece is the nave ceiling of the Church of Sant'Ignazio in Rome. Through his techniques, he has become one of the most remarkable figures of the Baroque period.

Early years

Born in Trento (then under Austrian rule), he did his Humanities at the local Jesuit High School. Showing artistic inclinations he was sent by his father to work with an artist; Pozzo was then 17 years old (in 1659). From aspects of his early style this initial artistic training came probably from Palma il Giovane. After three years he passed under the guidance of another unidentified painter from the workshop of Andrea Sacchi who appears to have taught him the techniques of Roman High Baroque. He would later travel to Como and Milan.

As a Jesuit

On 25 December 1665, he entered the Jesuit Order as a lay brother. In 1668, he was assigned to the Casa Professa of San Fidele in Milan, where his festival decorations in honour of Francis Borgia recently canonised (1671) met general approval. He continued artistic training in Genoa and Venice. His early paintings attest the influence of the Lombard School : rich colour, graphic chiaroscuro. When he painted in Genoa the Life of Jesus for the Congregazione de' Mercanti, he was undoubtedly inspired by Peter Paul Rubens.

Decorating churches

His artistic activity was related to the new (relative to Catholic Church's medieval monastic orders) Order's enormous artistic needs; since many of the Jesuit churches were built in recent decades and were devoid of painted decoration. He was frequently employed by the Jesuits to decorate churches and buildings such as their churches of Modena, Bologna and Arezzo. In 1676, he decorated the interior of San Francis Xavier church in Mondovi. In this church one can already see his later illusionistic techniques : fake gilding, bronze-coloured statues, marbled columns and a trompe-l'oeil dome on a flat ceiling, peopled with foreshortened figures in architectural settings. This was his first large fresco.

In Turin (1678), he painted the ceiling of the Jesuit church of SS. Martiri. The frescoes gradually deteriorated through water infiltration. They were replaced in 1844 by new paintings by Luigi Vacca. Only fragments of the original frescoes survive.

Called to Rome

In 1681, Pozzo was called to Rome by Giovanni Paolo Oliva, Superior General of the Jesuits. Among others, Pozzo worked for Livio Odescalchi, the powerful nephew of the pope, Innocent XI. Initially he was used as a stage designer for biblical pageants, but his illusionistic paintings in perspective for these stages gave him soon a reputation as a virtuoso in wall and ceiling decorations.

The Gesù rooms

His first Roman frescoes were in the corridor linking the Church of the Gesù to the rooms where St.Ignatius had lived. His trompe-l'oeil architecture and paintings depicting the Saint's life for the Camere di San Ignazio (1681-1686), blended well with already existing paintings by Giacomo Borgognone.

The St Ignatius' Church

His masterpiece, the illusory perspectives in frescoes [1] of the dome, the apse and the ceiling of Rome's Jesuit church of Sant'Ignazio (illustrations right and below) were painted between 1685 - 1694 and are a remarkable and emblematic creation of High Roman Baroque. For several generations, they set the standard for the decoration of Late Baroque ceiling frescos throughhout Catholic Europe. Compare this work to Gaulli's masterpiece in the other major Jesuit church in Rome, Il Gesù.

The project had not started upon the church's completion; Sant'Ignazio remained unfinished even after its consecration in 1642. Disputes with the original donors, the Ludovisi, had stopped construction of the planned dome. Pozzo expediently proposed to make an illusionistic dome, when viewed from inside, by painting on canvas. It was impressive to viewers, but controversial; some feared the canvas would soon darken.

On the flat ceiling he painted an allegory of the Apotheosis of S. Ignatius, in breathtaking perspective. The painting, 17 m in diameter, is devised to make an observer, looking from a spot marked by a brass disc set into the floor of the nave, seem to see a lofty vaulted roof decorated by statues, while in fact the ceiling is flat. The painting celebrates the missionary spirit of two centuries of adventurous apostolic spirit of Jesuit explorers and missionaries. To modern sensitivities, this would appear to substantiate the imperialistic partnering of European Catholicism with colonial enterprises in other continents. It was also a combative Catholicism. For example, in the pendentives rather than placing the usual evangelists or scholarly pillars of doctrine, he depicted the victorious warriors of the old testament: Judith and Holofernes; David and Goliath; Jael and Sisera; and Samson and the Philistines. It is said that when completed, some said (sic)"Sant'Ignazio was a good place to buy meat, since four new butchers are now there."

In the nave fresco, Light comes from God the Father to the Son who transmits it to St. Ignatius, whence it breaks into four rays leading to the four continents. Pozzo explained that he illustrated the words of Christ in Luke: I am come to send fire on the earth, and the words of Ignatius: Go and set everything aflame. A further ray illuminates the name of Jesus (2). With its perspective, space-enlarging illusory architecture and with the apparition of the heavenly assembly whirling above, the ensemble offered an example which was copied in several Italian, Austrian and German churches of the Jesuit order.

The illustionistic perspective of Pozzo's brilliant trompe-l'oeil dome at Sant'Ignazio (1685) is revealed by viewing it from the opposite end
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The illustionistic perspective of Pozzo's brilliant trompe-l'oeil dome at Sant'Ignazio (1685) is revealed by viewing it from the opposite end

The architecture of the trompe-l'oeil dome (illustration, left) seems to erase and raise the ceiling with such a realistic impression that it is difficult to distinguish what is real or not. Andrea Pozzo painted this ceiling and trompe-l'oeil dome on a canvas, 17 m wide. The paintings in the apse depict scenes from the life of St. Ignatius, St Francis Xavier and St Francis Borgia.

St Ignatius chapel (Gesù)

In 1695 he was given the prestigious commission, after winning a competition against Sebastiano Cipriani and Giovanni Battista Origone, for an altar in the St. Ignatius chapel in the left transept of the Church of the Gesù. This grandiose altar above the tomb of the saint, built with rare marbles and precious metals, shows the Trinity, while four lapis lazuli columns (these are now copies) enclose the colossal statue of the saint by Pierre Legros. It was the coordinated work of more than 100 sculptors and craftsmen, among them Pierre Legros, Bernardino Ludovisi, Il Lorenzone and Jean-Baptiste Théodon. Andrea Pozzo also designed the altar in the Chapel of St Francesco Borgia in the same church.

Altars in St Ignatius church

In 1697 he was asked to build similar Baroque altars with scenes from the life of St Ignatius in the apse of the Sant'Ignazio church in Rome. These altars house the relics of St. Aloysius Gonzaga and of St. John Berchmans.

Other works of art

Meanwhile he continued painting frescoes and illusory domes in Turin, Mondovi, Modena, Montepulciano and Arezzo. In 1681 he was asked by Cosimo III de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany to paint his self-portrait for the ducal collection (now in the Uffizi in Florence). This oil on canvas has become a most original self-portrait. It shows the painter in a diagonal pose, showing with his right index finger his illusionist easel painting (a trompe-l'oeil dome, perhaps of the Badia church in Arezzo) while his left hand rests on three books (probably alluding to his not-yet published treatises on perspective). The painting was sent to the duke in 1688. He also painted scenes from the life of St Stanislaus Kostka in the saint's rooms of the Jesuit noviciate of Sant'Andrea al Quirinale in Rome.

In Vienna

In 1694 Andrea Pozzo had explained his illusory techniques in a letter to Anton Florian, Prince of Liechtenstein and ambassador of Emperor Leopold I to the Papal Court in Rome. Recommended by Prince Liechtenstein to the emperor, Andrea Pozzo, on the invitation of Leopold I, moved in 1702 (1703?) to Vienna.There he worked for the sovereign, the court, Prince Johann Adam von Liechtenstein, and various religious orders and churches, such as the frescoes and the trompe-l'oeil dome in the Jesuit Church. Some of his tasks were of a decorative, occasional character (church and theatre scenery), and these were soon destroyed.

His most significant surviving work in Vienna is the monumental ceiling fresco of the Hercules Hall of the Liechtenstein garden palace (1707), an Admittance of Hercules to Olympus, which, according to the sources, was very admired by contemporaries. Through illusionistic effects, the architectural painting starts unfolding at the border of the ceiling, while the ceiling seems to open up into a heavenly realm filled with olympian gods.

Some of his Viennese altarpieces have also survived (Vienna's Jesuit church). His compositions of altarpieces and illusory ceiling frescoes had a strong influence on the Baroque art in Vienna. He also had many followers in Hungary, Bohemia, Moravia, and even in Poland. His canvases show him to be a far less compelling a painter at close inspection.

Writings

Pozzo published his artistic ideas in a noted theoretical work, entitled Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum (2 volumes, 1693, 1698) illustrated with 118 engravings, dedicated to emperor Leopold I. In it he offered instruction in painting architectural perspectives and stage-sets. The work was one of the earliest manuals on perspective for artists and architects and went into many editions, even into the nineteenth century, and has been translated from the original Latin and Italian into numerous languages such as French, German, English and, Chinese thanks to Pozzo's Jesuit connection.

Fresco with Trompe l'œuil, Jesuit Church, Vienna, Austria
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Fresco with Trompe l'œuil, Jesuit Church, Vienna, Austria

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Architect

There are a few architectural designs in his book Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum, indicating that he didn't make any designs before 1690. These designs were not realized, but the design for the S. Apollinare church in Rome was used for the Jesuit church of S Francesco Saverio (1700-1702) in Trento. The interior of this church was equally designed by Pozzo.

At about the same time, between 1701 and 1702, he designed the Jesuit churches of San Bernardo and Chiesa del Gesù in Montepulciano. But his plans for the last church were only partly realized. He is also noted for the construction of the cathedral of St. Nicholas in Ljubljana (1708), inspired by the designs of the Jesuit churches Il Gesù and S. Ignazio in Rome.

Death

He died in Vienna in 1709 at a moment when he intended to return to Italy to design a new Jesuit church in Venice. He was buried with great honours in one of his best realisations, the Jesuit church in Vienna.

His brother, Giuseppe Pozzo, became a barefooted and Carmelite monk of Venice, and was also a painter. He decorated the high altar of the church of the Scalzi in that city during the last years of the 17th century[1].

See also

References

  • (in French) BENEZIT, E.: Dictionnaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs et Graveurs; Librairie Gründ, Paris, 1976; ISBN 2-7000-0156-7 (*WATERHOUSE, E.J.: Baroque painting in Rome, the Seventeenth Century, London, 1937.
  • (in Italian) CARBONERI, N.: Andrea Pozzo, architetto (1642-1709), Trento, 1961.
  • Turner, J. (1990). Grove Dictionary of Art. MacMilllan Publishers Ltd. ISBN 1-884446-00-0. 
  • Haskell, Francis (1980). Patrons and Painters; Art and Society in Baroque Italy, 88-92. 
  1. ^ Bryan, Michael (1889). in Walter Armstrong & Robert Edmund Graves: Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical (Volume II L-Z). York St. #4, Covent Garden, London; Original from Fogg Library, Digitized May 18, 2007: George Bell and Sons, page 318. .

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