Dictionary of Renaissance art

VASARI, GIORGIO

Vasari, Giorgio: translation

(1511-1574)
Tuscan painter, architect, and writer, best known for hisLives of the Most Excellent Painters,Sculptors,and Architects, the earliest compendium of biographies of artists. Born in Arezzo, the 16-year-old Vasari was sent by Cardinal Silvio Passerini, who had close ties with theMedici, toFlorenceto apprentice withAndrea del SartoalongsideRosso FiorentinoandJacopo da Pontormo. The cardinal also sponsored the artist's humanist education alongside the young Ippolito and Alessandro de' Medici, who were under his guardianship.Vasari's relationship with the Medici was to sustain his artistic career for the rest of his life.
Vasari's output as painter is vast as he steadily received commissions from this family as well as the papal court inRome. In the 1540s he was occupied with thefrescoesin the papal Palazzo della Cancellería for PopePaul III. For thestudioloof Francesco I de' Mediciin thePalazzo Vecchio, Florence, Vasari contributed hisPerseus and Andromeda(1570-1572) to represent the element of water and relate the story of the formation of coral. Other works by him include theAllegory of theImmaculate Conception(1541) and theProphetElijah(c. 1555), both in theUffizi, Florence. Vasari's greatest accomplishment as architect was the Uffizi (offices) (beg. 1560), a structure commissioned by Cosimo I de' Medici to consolidate the governmental offices under one roof. Vasari also built for him agrotto(1556-1560) in the Boboli Gardens located between the Uf-fizi and the Palazzo Pitti where the Medici resided.
Though Vasari had a distinguished career as artist, he is most often invoked for the wealth of information he provided in hisLives, first published in 1550. The work is a product of the Renaissance mind-set that individual achievement should be recorded so it may inspire others to excel. TheLivesis a chronological account of the progress of art divided into three stages. In the first stage, the leading figure isGiottowho, in Vasari's view, was responsible for the rebirth of art after the decline it had suffered when the Roman era ended. Giotto and his followers examined nature carefully, tried to imitate its colors and forms on the pictorial surface, and to portray their figures expressively. The second stage is the era ofMasacciowho applied science to art, introducing anatomical realism andone-point linearandatmospheric perspective. The third and final stage, the era ofLeonardo da Vinci, Raphael, andMichelangelo, resulted in the complete triumph over nature. Of these three key figures, Vasari believed that it was Michelangelo, whom he knew personally, who had achieved the heights of perfection. Vasari's text continues to be employed as a major source of information on the artists of the Renaissance and its three-partite division of the period still serves as the basis for the modern assessment of Renaissance art.

  1. vasari, giorgioVasari Giorgio translation Vasari Giorgio Painter architect and writer dd Catholic Encyclopedia.Kevin Knight...Catholic encyclopedia
  2. vasari, giorgioVasari Giorgio translation Italian artist and architect best known as the author of a highly influential history of art. The son of an artisan of Arezzo he received a goo...Historical Dictionary of Renaissance
  3. vasari, giorgioVASARI Giorgio translationGiorgio Vasari was an Italian writer painter draughtsman architect and collector. Born in Arezzo Vasari remained loyal to his Tuscan roots placi...Renaissance and Reformation 1500-1620_ A Biographical Dictionary