MOSCA, Francesco - b. ~1546 , d. 1578 Pisa - WGA

MOSCA, Francesco

(b. ~1546 , d. 1578 Pisa)

Italian sculptor, part of a family of artists, the son of the sculptor Simone Mosca. He also worked in Orvieto, and he may have completed his father’s unfinished commissions. For the cathedral there he executed a nude statue of St Sebastian and figures of St Peter and St Paul. He also executed statues for Pisa Cathedral (a Virgin and Child and Angel in the chapel of the Annunciation) and in 1577 travelled to Parma, where he was employed briefly by the Farnese as court sculptor. A marble relief of Diana and Acteon (Florence, Bargello) and a free-standing group of Atalanta and Meleager (Kansas City, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art) reflect Francesco’s indebtedness to mid-16th-century Mannerism.

Diana and Actaeon
Diana and Actaeon by

Diana and Actaeon

This is a charming sculptural work with extremely subtle formal changes of plane. It is a fine example of the kind of hedonism that pervaded the private commissions of the Medici princes of the later 1500s.

Feedback