POLIDORO DA CARAVAGGIO - b. ~1497 Caravaggio, d. 1543 Messina - WGA

POLIDORO DA CARAVAGGIO

(b. ~1497 Caravaggio, d. 1543 Messina)

Italian painter and draughtsman, originally Polidoro Caldara. His surname, Caravaggio, came from his birthplace. He moved from Lombardy to Rome around 1515 and soon joined Raphael’s workshop, which was then occupied with the frescoes in the Vatican Palace. A student of Raphael, he was responsible for some of the monochrome decorations in the Vatican Stanze as well as for the Loggetta of Cardinal Bernardo Bibbiena. In 1517-18 he began working with Giulio Romano and Perino del Vaga on the frescoes in the Vatican Logge of Leo X, where he can be credited with the scenes of Joseph Sold by his Brothers and the Crossing of the Jordan. He formed a close friendship with Perino and with the Spanish painter Pedro Machuca, who was also working on the Logge.

Between 1524 and 1527, Polidoro became renowned for his monochrome re-creations of Roman history that spanned palace facades. He decorated the exterior of many Roman palaces in sgraffito, a form of painting where, over a dark background, often stucco, a lighter-coloured layer was painted, and designs, scratched through the light layer, only showed dark on light. These designs are known today only from reproductive etchings and engravings.

When Charles V’s armies sacked Rome in 1527, Polidoro fled the city, traveling to Naples, where he had escaped Rome’s plague in 1524. In Messina by 1528, far from Italy’s artistic centers, Polidoro settled upon a strong, consistent style from which he deviated little. Using lively, loose brushwork, he painted mainly religious scenes infused with a sense of drama and intense emotion.

A prolific draftsman, Polidoro drew in preparation for paintings and for its own sake. His drawings express inventive fantasy and real experience with force and emotion. Tradition has it that his servant murdered Polidoro for his money.

Design for a Vase
Design for a Vase by

Design for a Vase

Just before the Sack of Rome in 1527, Polidoro da Caravaggio, who was one of the most accomplished of Raphael’s pupils, decorated the fa�ade of the Palazzo Milesi in the city with a series of monochrome frescoes, depicting classical scenes, trophies and vases. The wit and invention, particularly of the designs of the vases, meant that these motifs became widely admired, and their fame spread as a number of series of prints reproduced them. The first of these were created by Cherubino Alberti in 1582. This engraving comes, however, from a set published in Prague by Aegidius Sadeler (c. 1570-c. 1609) in 1605, which reverse the Alberti prints. The perspective of the vase is distorted, so it is seen as though in situ, and looked up at from street level.

Group of Figures Holding Book
Group of Figures Holding Book by

Group of Figures Holding Book

The Lombard heritage of Polidoro can be discerned in his landscape studies and many drawings of genre scenes, all executed in red chalk, a medium favoured by Leonardo and his Lombard followers. Polidoro took up a broad range of subjects in his genre drawings. The picture shows the verso of the sheet, on the recto being a schoolmistress with her pupil.

Noli me tangere
Noli me tangere by

Noli me tangere

Schoolmistress with Her Pupils
Schoolmistress with Her Pupils by

Schoolmistress with Her Pupils

The Lombard heritage of Polidoro can be discerned in his landscape studies and many drawings of genre scenes, all executed in red chalk, a medium favoured by Leonardo and his Lombard followers. Polidoro took up a broad range of subjects in his genre drawings. This sheet shows a schoolmistress with her pupil (recto) while on the verso a group of figures holding books can be seen.

Studies of a Male Torso
Studies of a Male Torso by

Studies of a Male Torso

It is possible that Polidoro da Caravaggio based this drawing on studies of this kind by Michelangelo. This would possibly confirm a journey by Polidoro from Messina to Rome shortly before his death. According to Vasari, however, the journey was planned but never taken.

Two male heads
Two male heads by

Two male heads

The bearded man, facing forward, is considered by most critics to be a self-portrait executed by Polidoro da Caravaggio. The bearded face in this study is an archetypal character who recurs often in the artist’s pictorial works, and it is not implausible that the artist chose a self-portrait to create a figure with a universal quality that could be used in different compositions.

Young Men Dancing around a Woman
Young Men Dancing around a Woman by

Young Men Dancing around a Woman

The Lombard heritage of Polidoro can be discerned in his landscape studies and many drawings of genre scenes, all executed in red chalk, a medium favoured by Leonardo and his Lombard followers. Polidoro took up a broad range of subjects in his genre drawings.

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