Francesco Francia

Italian painter, goldsmith, and medallist
Francesco Francia
Bentivolio coin by Francesco Francia.

Francesco Francia, whose real name was Francesco Raibolini (1447 – 5 January 1517) was an Italian painter, goldsmith, and medallist from Bologna, who was also director of the city mint.[1][2]

He may have trained with Marco Zoppo and was first mentioned as a painter in 1486. His earliest known work is the Felicini Madonna, which is signed and dated 1494. He worked in partnership with Lorenzo Costa, and was influenced by Ercole de' Roberti's and Costa's style. After 1505 he was influenced more by Perugino and Raphael. He had a large workshop and trained Marcantonio Raimondi, Ludovico Marmitta,[3] and several other artists; he produced niellos, in which Raimondi first learnt to engrave, soon excelling his master, according to Vasari. Raphael's Santa Cecilia is supposed to have produced such a feeling of inferiority in Francia that it caused him to die of depression. However, as his friendship with Raphael is now well-known, this story has been discredited.

He died in Bologna. His sons Giacomo Francia and Giulio Francia were also artists.

Works (selection of paintings)

Until 1500

  • Crucifixion with St. John and St. Jerome, c. 1485, 52 cm x 33 cm, oil on wood, Palazzo d'Accursio, Bologna
  • The Holy Family, c. 1485, 54 cm x 40 cm, oil on wood, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
  • The Virgin and Child with an Angel, c. 1490, 58 cm x 44 cm, oil on wood, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
  • Bartolomeo Bianchini,[4] c. 1485–1500, 57 cm x 41 cm, oil on wood, National Gallery, London
  • Baptism of Jesus, c. 1490, 29 cm x 55 cm, oil on wood, Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon
  • Madonna and Child with two Angels, c. 1495, 64 cm x 49 cm, oil on wood, Alte Pinakothek, Munich
  • Pala Calcina, 1500, 193 cm x 151 cm, tempera and oil on canvas (formerly wood), Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg
  • Crucifixion c. 1485, Bologna
    Crucifixion
    c. 1485, Bologna
  • The Holy Family c. 1485, Berlin
    The Holy Family
    c. 1485, Berlin
  • Madonna with Angel 1495-1500, Pittsburg
    Madonna with Angel
    1495-1500, Pittsburg
  • Bartolomeo Biachini 1485-1500, London
    Bartolomeo Biachini
    1485-1500, London
  • Madonna with Angels c. 1495, Munich
    Madonna with Angels
    c. 1495, Munich

Years 1500-10

  • Madonna and Child, c. 1500, 67 cm x 52 cm, oil on wood, Wallington National Trust, Northumberland
  • Madonna and Child with Saints Francis and Jerome,[5] 1500–10, 75 cm x 57 cm, tempera on wood, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • The Annunciation with St. Albert the Carmelite, c. 1503–04, 182 cm x 132 cm, oil on canvas (formerly wood), Musée Condé, Chantilly
  • Adoration of the Child, 1500–05, 175 cm x 132 cm, oil on wood, Alte Pinakothek, Munich
  • Evangelista Scappi, 1500–05, 55 cm x 44 cm, oil on wood, Uffizi, Florence
  • Bishop Altobello Averoldo,[6] c. 1505, 54 cm x 41 cm, oil on wood, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Crucifixion, c. 1505, 246 cm x 146 cm, oil on wood, San Giacomo Maggiore, Bologna
  • The life of Saint Cecilia and her husband Valerian - scene 1 (The Marriage) & 10 (The Burial), 1504–1506, 360 cm x 290 cm, frescoes, Oratorio di Santa Cecilia, Bologna
  • Venus and Cupid, 1505–10, 80 cm x 49 cm, oil on wood, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Mulhouse
  • Baptism of Jesus, 1509, 209 cm x 169 cm, oil on wood, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden
  • Madonna c. 1500, Northumberland
    Madonna
    c. 1500, Northumberland
  • Adoration of Child 1500-05, Munich
    Adoration of Child
    1500-05, Munich
  • Evangelista Scappi 1500-05, Florence
    Evangelista Scappi
    1500-05, Florence
  • Altobello Averoldo c. 1505, Washington
    Altobello Averoldo
    c. 1505, Washington
  • Cecilia / Le Mariage 1504-06, Bologna
    Cecilia / Le Mariage
    1504-06, Bologna
  • Venus and Cupid 1505-10, Mulhouse
    Venus and Cupid
    1505-10, Mulhouse

After 1510

  • The Holy Family, c. 1510, 64 cm x 49 cm, oil on wood, Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest
  • Federico Gonzaga (son of Isabella d'Este),[7] 1510, 45 cm x 34 cm, oil on wood transferred to canvas and finally again on wood, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • Portrait likely Isabella d'Este, 1511, 44 cm x 35 cm, oil on wood, Vienna
  • Pala Buonvisi,[8] 1510–12, 195 cm x 180 cm, oil on wood, National Gallery, London
  • Presentation of Jesus in the temple,[9] 1510–13, 201 cm x 145 cm, oil on wood, Pinacoteca Comunale di Cesena, Italy
  • Virgin and the Child and the Infant St. John the Baptist,[10] 1510–15, 65 cm x 51 cm, oil on wood, São Paulo Museum of Art
  • Virgin and the Child and the Infant St. John the Baptist (Francesco Francia and sons),[11] c. 1515, 115 cm x 94 cm, oil on wood, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
  • Federico Gonzaga 1510, New York
    Federico Gonzaga
    1510, New York
  • Likely Isabella d'Este 1511, Vienna
    Likely Isabella d'Este
    1511, Vienna
  • Pala Buonvisi 1510-12, London
    Pala Buonvisi
    1510-12, London
  • Presentation of Jesus 1510-13, Italy
    Presentation of Jesus
    1510-13, Italy
  • Madonna 1510-15, São Paulo
    Madonna
    1510-15, São Paulo
  • Madonna (Francia & sons) c. 1515, Melbourne
    Madonna (Francia & sons)
    c. 1515, Melbourne

See also

  • Adoration of the Shepherds (Raphael)

References

Citations

  1. ^ Levinson:492
  2. ^ Mrs Jameson (December 29, 1866). "Lives of the Early Painters: Francesco Raibolini, Called Il Francia". The American Art Journal. 6 (10): 152–153. JSTOR 25306713.
  3. ^ Dizionario biografico dei Parmigiani illustri o benemeriti nelle scienze, nelle lettere, e nelle arti, by Giovanni Battista Janelli, Genoa, 1877, page 241.
  4. ^ https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/francesco-francia-bartolomeo-bianchini (18.04.2022)
  5. ^ Francia, Madonna and Child, 1500, Metropolitan
  6. ^ https://www.nga.gov/collection/art-object-page.41679.html (18.04.2022)
  7. ^ http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/436333 (18.04.2022)
  8. ^ https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/francesco-francia-saint-anne-with-the-virgin-and-four-saints (18.04.2022)
  9. ^ https://w3id.org/arco/resource/HistoricOrArtisticProperty/0800024493
  10. ^ https://masp.org.br/en/collections/works/virgin-and-the-child-and-the-infant-st-john-the-baptist (18.04.2022)
  11. ^ https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/explore/collection/work/97141/ (18.04.2022)

Sources

  • Giorgio Vasari: Le vite dei più eccellenti architetti, pittori et scultori italiani, Florence 1568
  • George C. Williamson: Francesco Raibolini, called Francia, London 1901
  • Giuseppe Piazzi: Le Opere di Francesco Raibolini, detto il Francia, orefice e pittore. Azzoguidi, Bologna 1925
  • Emilio Negro, Nicosetta Roio: Francesco Francia e la sua scuola. Artioli Editore, Modena 1998, ISBN 8877920572
  • Hickson, Sally (2009). "'To see ourselves as others see us': Giovanni Francesco Zaninello of Ferrara and the portrait of Isabella d'Este by Francesco Francia" (PDF). Renaissance Studies. 23 (3): 288–310. doi:10.1111/j.1477-4658.2009.00565.x. ISSN 0269-1213.[dead link]
  • Gillet, Louis (1909). "Francia" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading

  • Pope-Hennessy, John; Kanter, Laurence B. (1987). The Robert Lehman Collection I, Italian Paintings. New York, Princeton: The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press. ISBN 0870994794. (see index; plate 91)

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