Leone Leoni

Leone Leoni

:"See also Leone Leoni (composer), (c. 1560 - 1627)".Leone Leoni (1509 — 22 July 1590) was an Italian sculptor of international outlook who travelled in Italy, Germany, Austria, France, the Spanish Netherlands and Spain. Leoni is regarded as the finest of the "Cinquecento" medallists. [A typical passing reference to Leoni's reputation was made by James J. Rorimer in "The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin" 26.4 (April 1931), p 88] He made his reputation in commissions he received from the Habsburg monarchs Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II of Spain. His usual medium was bronze, although he also worked in marble, alabaster, carved gemstones and probably left some finished work in wax (in which many of his sculptures were modelled), as well as designing coins. He mainly produced portraits, and was repeatedly used by the Spanish, and also the Austrian, Habsburgs.

Biography

His family origins were at Arezzo, [Leoni liked to sign his medals, sometimes in Greek, as an Aretine; the marble monument to Gian Giacomo Medici di Marignano bears the bronze legend under the soffit LEO·ARRETIN·EQUES·F.] though he was probably born at Menaggio near Lake Como, and his early training, to judge from the finish of his medals, was with a medallist or goldsmith, as Vasari says. [ [http://biblio.cribecu.sns.it/cgi-bin/vasari/Vasari-all?code_f=print_page&work=le_vite&volume_n=6&page_n=201 Vasari, "le vite...": "Lione Lioni Aretino"] ] His earliest documentation finds him at Venice after 1533, with his wife and infant son, living under the protection of his Aretine compatriot (and possible kinsman), Pietro Aretino, who introduced him to the circle of Titian. [Trevor-Roper, Hugh; "Princes and Artists, Patronage and Ideology at Four Habsburg Courts 1517-1633", Thames & Hudson, London, 1976, p30] Taking advantage of his rival Benvenuto Cellini's being in prison at the time, he secured the role of designer for the Papal mint in Ferrara (1538-40) but was forced to withdraw under accusations of counterfeiting levelled by Pellegrino di Leuti, the jeweller of the Farnese Pope Paul III; Leoni attacked Pellegrino and was condemned to lose his right hand, a sentence commuted after the intercession of powerful friends to slavery in the galleys, from which the entreaties of Andrea Doria released him after a year: Leoni produced three plaquettes and five medals of Andrea Doria as tokens of his gratitude. [Trevor-Roper "op cit" p 30; [http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/explore/highlights/highlight_objects/cm/c/cast_bronze_medal_of_andrea_do.aspx British Museum: Cast bronze medal of Andrea Doria] ; see also Louvre and National Gallery of Art, Washington; [http://www.artfund.org/artwork/9660/andrea-doria-offering-a-sacrifice plaquette now in the British Museum] ] Once freed from the galleys, he "continued his alternation of criminal violence and exquisite workmanship" [ Trevor-Roper, op cit p.31] moving to Milan to take up an Imperial appointment as master of the mint there, from 20 February 1542, at 150 ducats a year and the gift of a house in the Moroni district of Milan. Leoni's house in Milan, rebuilt 1565-67, was immediately called the "Casa degli Omenoni" for its heroically-scaled herm figures and bearded atlantes, a rarity in Milan at the time; it is indicative of his social success. The figures were carved by Antonio Abondio, doubtless following Leoni's models. Here he entertained Giorgio Vasari, who noted Leoni's large collection of plaster casts after the Antique, dominated by a stucco of the equestrian Marcus Aurelius from the Campidoglio in his courtyard. [cite journal|first=Michael P.|last=Mezzatesta|title=The Façade of Leone Leoni's House in Milan, the Casa degli Omenoni: The Artist and the Public|journal=The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians|volume=44|issue=3|date=October 1985|pages=pp. 233–249|doi=10.2307/990074.] His early protector in Milan, with whom he was on familiar terms, was the Imperial Governor, Ferrante Gonzaga. He lived in Milan thereafter, despite calls from his patrons to base himself, or at least present himself, at court, claiming that only there could he obtain the proper materials for his work - a notable contrast with Giambologna who was never allowed to leave Florence by his Grand Duke, as he bitterly complained, for fear the Habsburgs would ensnare him. [Trevor-Roper, "op. cit." p 31, 90-91.] Among other later violent incidents, he was supposed to have attempted to murder Titian's son, who was staying with him in Milan. [Trevor-Roper "op. cit." p 30,]

He had made an early reputation for portrait medallions, before his major commissions from Charles V, whose image for posterity lies in his portraits by Titian and Leoni. Leoni was the guest of Charles in Brussels in 1549, and the first of the portraits from life dates from this time; however, Leoni had made a portrait medallion of Charles in 1536. In Brussels the Emperor installed Leoni in an apartment below his own and delighted in his company, spending hours watching him at work, Vasari recalled. He knighted Leoni on 2 November 1549.

For the cathedral of Milan, Leone executed the five bronze figures for the monument of the condottiero Gian Giacomo Medici, brother of Pope Pius IV, in a marble architectural setting that Vasari attributed to a drawing by Michelangelo.

On a commission from Cardinal Granvelle (1516-86), Bishop of Arras, Archbishop of Malines, Viceroy of Naples, and the leading Habsburg minister, Leone cast life-sized half-figures in richly framed ovals, of Charles, Philip and the Cardinal, described by Vasari. ["...alcuni pezzi di bronzo in forma ovale di braccia due l'uno, con ricchi partimenti e mezze statue dentrovi; in uno è Carlo Quinto, in un altro il re Filippo, e nel terzo esso cardinale, ritratti di naturale: e tutte hanno imbasamenti di figurette graziosissime."] Granvelle would often correspond with Leoni, whom he may have known from his youth in as a student in Padua, about Habsburg commissions (which usually overran their promised delivery dates).

A marble portrait of Giovan Battista Castaldo, at the Church of San Bartolomeo, Nocera Inferiore — a commission mentioned by Vasari who thought it was bronze and did not know to which monastery it had been sent — was included in the exhibition "Tiziano e il ritratto di corte", Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, 2006. [ [http://www.mostratiziano.it/italiano/elenco_opere.html On-line website] ]

Leoni's commissions for royal portraiture in Spain were an extension of his Habsburg patronage. On his return from Spain, where he executed the series of royal portraits, he brought a purse of 2000 "scudi", according to Vasari. He pioneered what became a common Baroque format for a portrait bust; mounted on a pedestal, and truncated at mid-chest, or the bottom of the stomach (often defined by an armoured breast-plate), sweeping up at the sides to just below the shoulders. He also made life-size full-length portrait bronzes, like that of Charles V, which were not intended as funerary effigies, as nearly all previous examples had been.

Leoni was assisted in the monumental bronzes destined for the Escorial by his son Pompeo Leoni (c.1533–1608), who continued the large bronze-casting foundry after his father's death, in a style that is not securely separated from that of his father. Among the assistants to Pompeo was Adriaen de Vries.

Leoni's name remained among the few recognizable landmarks in 16th century sculpture and consequently attracted many attributions during the nineteenth century. [E. Plon, "Leone Leoni, sculpteur de Charles-Quint et Pompeo Leoni, sculpteur de Philippe II" (Paris 1883) was singled out as particularly filled with unwarranted attributions by Ulrich Middeldorf, "On some portrait busts attributed to Leone Leoni" "The Burlington Magazine" 117 No. 863 (February 1975), pp. 84-89, 91.]

George Sand's "Leone Leoni" is not based on the sculptor's career.

ome representative attributed works

*Medals including Charles V, [ [http://cartelen.louvre.fr/cartelen/visite?srv=rs_display_res&critere=Leone+Leoni&operator=AND&photoOnly=true&nbToDisplay=20&langue=fr Nine medals of several of these figures from the Louvre] ] Ferdinand I, Philip II, Giorgio Vasari, Michelangelo Buonarroti, [Leone's medallion of Michelangelo was mentioned by Vasari: "When Pius V became pope, he showed Michael Angelo much favour, and employed him in many works, particularly in making the design of a monument for the Marquis Marignano, his brother. The work was entrusted by his Holiness to Lione Lioni, a great friend of Michael Angelo's, and about the same time Lione pourtrayed Michael Angelo on a medallion, putting at his wish on the reverse a blind man led by a dog, with the words, "Docebo iniquos vias tuas, et impii ad te convertentur," and because the thing pleased him much, Michael Angelo gave him a model in wax of Hercules and Antaeus. There are only two painted portraits of Michael Angelo, the one by Bugiardini and the other by Jacopo del Conte, besides one in bronze by Daniello Ricciarelli, and this one of Lione's, of which there have been so many copies made that I have seen a great number in Italy and elsewhere." [http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/explore/highlights/highlight_image.aspx?
]
] Andrea Doria, and Ippolita Gonzaga.
*"Charles V Dominating Fury", 1550-53 (Prado) [ [http://museoprado.mcu.es/i56.html Museo del Prado: "Charles V Dominating Fury"] ; the armor is removable, showing Charles V equally well as a heroic nude, a tour de force that delighted Vasari: "quella poi con due gusci sottilissimi vestì d'una molto gentile armatura, che se gli lieva e veste facilmente, e con tanta grazia che chi la vede vestita non s'accorge e non può quasi credere ch'ella sia ignuda, e quando è nuda niuno crederebbe agevolmente ch'ella potesse così bene armarsi già mai." (Vasari).] ;
*Standing portrait of Isabella of Portugal (Prado)
*Portrait of Philip II (1554), exhibited in Milan for several months (Philip was Duke of Milan), before being sent to Spain;
*Bust of Alfonso d'Avalos, marchese del Vasto, bronze (Morgan Library, New York);
*Five bronze figures in the monument to Gian Giacomo Medici di Marignano, 1560-63 (Milan Cathedral), portrait of Gian Giacomo with "Peace" and "Martial Virtue"; above are "Providence" and "Fame"; this was Leoni's first venture at an architectural setting, with a design that Vasari said had been provided by Michelangelo.
*"Triumph of Ferrante Gonzaga over Envy", 1564, commissioned by his son Cesare Gonzaga to commemorate Ferrante's governorship of Milan and noted by Vasari (Piazza Rome, Guastalla);
*Kneeling figures of Charles V, Philip II and their families, for the church at the Escorial;
*Bust of Charles V (Prado);
*Bust of Philip II, alabaster (Prado); another in marble in the Metropolitan [ [http://www.scholarsresource.com/browse/work/7618 picture] ]
*Bust of Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy as a boy, bronze, 1572 (Philadelphia Museum of Art)
*Busts of Charles V, Philip II and the Duke of Alva, noted by Vasari (the first two usually Windsor Castle, but in exhibition at The Queens Gallery Buckingham Palace until February 2008.) [ [http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/eGallery/maker.asp?maker=LEONI The Royal Collection: Leoni] : "Ha fatto Lione al duca d'Alva la testa di lui, quella di Carlo Quinto e quella del re Filippo." (Vasari). Vasari notes another bust of Alva, for Gonzaga at Sabbioneta.] ;
*Half-figures in ovals of Charles V, Philip II and Cardinal Granvelle, noted by Vasari.
*Carved gemstone miniatures of Charles V and Philip II (double portrait) [ [http://www.metmuseum.org/special/cameo_appearances/cameo_view_1.asp?item=4 Metropolitan Museum of Art] ] , Isabella of Portugal, Charles' empress, [ [http://www.metmuseum.org/special/cameo_appearances/cameo_view_1.asp?item=5 Metropolitan Museum of Art] ] in the Metropolitan, where there is also a enamelled and jewelled gold pendant medallion of Charles V.

References

*cite book|first=B.I.|last=Proske|title=Leone Leoni|year=1956

Notes

External links

* [http://www.efn.org/~acd/vite/VasariLeoni.html Life by Vasari, in English]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Leone Leoni — Carlos V, con los atributos de Emperador del Sacro Imperio Romano, Museo del Prado Nacimiento 1509 Arezzo …   Wikipedia Español

  • Leone Leoni — Bronzebüste Kaiser Karl V., Museo del Prado in Madrid Leone Leoni (* 1509 in Arezzo; † 22. Juli 1590 in Mailand) war ein italienischer Bildhauer, Goldschmied und Medailleur der Renaissance …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Leone Leoni — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Leoni (homonymie). Statue de Charles Quint, Musée du Prado …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Leoni — bezeichnet: eine Ortschaft der Gemeinde Berg am Starnberger See einen Nürnberger Draht und Kabelhersteller, siehe Leoni AG Leoni ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Adolfo Leoni (1917–1970), italienischer Radrennfahrer Bruno Leoni… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • LEONI, Leone — (LEONI, Leone(c. 1509 1590) and Pompeo (c. 1533 1608) Leone Leoni and his son Pompeo were Italian sculptors and medalists whose most famous works were done for the Habsburg monarchs, particularly Holy Roman Emperor Charles V* and his son, Philip… …   Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary

  • LEONI, Pompeo — (LEONI, Leone(c. 1509 1590) and Pompeo (c. 1533 1608) Leone Leoni and his son Pompeo were Italian sculptors and medalists whose most famous works were done for the Habsburg monarchs, particularly Holy Roman Emperor Charles V* and his son, Philip… …   Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620: A Biographical Dictionary

  • Leone Aretino — Leone Leoni Statue de Charles Quint, Musée du Prado …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Leoni — is an Italian surname and can refer to:*Bruno Leoni (1913 1967), Italian political philosopher (classical liberalism) and lawyer *Endrio Leoni (born 1968), Italian road bicycle racer *Franco Leoni (1864 1949), Italian opera composer (L Oracolo)… …   Wikipedia

  • Leone — steht für: Sierra leonischer Leone, die Währung von Sierra Leone Leone ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Cinzia Leone (* 1954), italienische Schauspielerin Giovanni Leone (1908–2001), italienischer Politiker Giuseppina Leone (* 1934),… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Leone (disambiguation) — Leone may refer to:Given name* Leone Battista Alberti, Italian Renaissance humanist polymath * Leone Caetani, Italian politician * Leone de Sommi, Italian writer * Leone Ginzburg, Italian journalist * Leone Leoni (1509 1590), Italian Renaissance… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”