SAN FRIANO, Maso da - b. 1531 Firenze, d. 1571 Firenze - WGA

SAN FRIANO, Maso da

(b. 1531 Firenze, d. 1571 Firenze)

Maso da San Friano (Tommaso d’Antonio Manzuoli) was an Italian painter. He received his initial training from either Pier Francesco Foschi or Carlo Portelli. The style of his earliest known work, the signed and dated Portrait of Two Architects (1556; Rome, Palazzo Venezia), suggests Foschi. By 1560 Maso’s reputation was such that he received two important commissions for altarpieces. For the de’ Pesci Chapel in San Pier Maggiore, Florence, he painted a Visitation (1560; Cambridge, Trinity Hall), revealing his intense fascination with the art of Andrea del Sarto. In its High Renaissance compositional structure and grandeur of movement, the work pays homage to del Sarto’s large altarpieces, such as the Passerini Assumption of the Virgin (1526; Florence, Pitti). Maso’s Virgin and Child with Saints (Cortona, Convento della Trinità) is primarily a simplification and abstraction of works by del Sarto, whose influence is particularly evident in the male saints, but it also contains elements from the works of Foschi (the faces of the women) and Jacopo Pontormo, particularly the cursive, pliant figure of Mary Magdalene.

Portrait of Elena Gaddi Quaratesi
Portrait of Elena Gaddi Quaratesi by

Portrait of Elena Gaddi Quaratesi

This portrait by a Medici court artist has a lovely spontaneous quality, as if the viewer had just interrupted the eighteen-year-old bride at her reading.

Portrait of Francesco I de' Medici
Portrait of Francesco I de' Medici by

Portrait of Francesco I de' Medici

Francesco I is portrayed full-length seated in an armchair, while a sceptre, crown and a female allegorical figure can be seen on a table in the background.

Maso executed this painting in Buontalenti’s workshop, where he worked.

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