VANNINI, Ottavio - b. 1585 Firenze, d. 1644 Firenze - WGA

VANNINI, Ottavio

(b. 1585 Firenze, d. 1644 Firenze)

Italian painter. He studied with Domenico Passignano in Florence and with Anastasio Fontebuoni (1580-1626) in Rome. In 1605, together with the Sienese painter Pietro Sorri (1556-1622), he executed one of his first commissions by completing the decoration of the Brunaccini Chapel in the church of the SS Annunziata in Florence. Probably he then moved to Rome as Passignano’s assistant, which makes his work of this period difficult to isolate and identify confidently. Nonetheless, under the influence of his studies of Raphael and Michelangelo, he developed a personal style based on 16th-century classicism.

He returned to Florence, where in 1618 he matriculated at the Accademia del Disegno and was fully employed on numerous commissions and in making copies. From c. 1619 he was involved in several important decorative schemes in Florence: in the Palazzo dell’Antella (Three Virtues (1619-20; part destroyed) in the cycle of frescoes on the façade); in 1622-23 at the Villa di Poggio Imperiale (four panels in the small vault of the Sala di Cosimo II and lunettes in other rooms); in the Casino Mediceo (decorations of the vault of the Sala di Francesco I). His most prestigious commission (1638-42) was executed at the Palazzo Pitti in Florence, where he completed the Salone degli Argenti (left unfinished by Giovanni di San Giovanni) with Lorenzo the Magnificent among the Florentine Artists (in situ).

For his most important patron, Andrea del Rosso (1640-1715), he frescoed the private chapel (destroyed) at his palace in the Via Chiara, executed at least 14 paintings (e.g. the Gathering of the Manna and Moses Drawing Water from the Rock, both Florence, private collection) for Rosso’s collection (works that are judged to be among his finest), and also produced other works intended for public places. Among his most notable paintings are Judith (c. 1625-30; Pisa Cathedral), the Virgin and Saints (1630s; Poppi, in Arezzo, S Fedele) and Rebecca at the Well (c. 1626-27; Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum).

General view of the Salone Terreno
General view of the Salone Terreno by

General view of the Salone Terreno

The picture shows the general view looking towards the north and west walls in the Sala Terreno (called the Room of Giovanni da San Giovanni) in the summer quarters of Ferdinando II de’ Medici on the ground floor in the Palazzo Pitti.

The Palazzo Pitti in Florence, purchased from the Pitti family by the wife of Duke CosimoI de’ Medici in 1549 and renovated and expanded by Bartolommeo Ammanati, served as a residence of royal proportions for roughly 350 years. It was occupied by the dynasties of the Medici, the Habsburgs, and finally the Savoyards, and subjected to constant adaptations and alterations. Intensive use by ruling families resulted in the lavish decoration of all floors. Fresco painters from three centuries contributed to the fixed decor of the public rooms and living quarters. Of its numerous apartments two suites of rooms stand out because of their decoration, function and size. These took their present form under Grand Duke Ferdinando II de’ Medici (1610-1670), and for the most part they were spared later encroachments owing to their high-quality frescoes. These are the reception rooms in the left (north) wing used by Ferdinando II. The rooms on the cooler ground floor, directly connected with the Boboli Gardens by way of a loggia and a terrace, served him as a summer apartment (Appartamento d’Estate); his winter quarters (Appartamento d’Inverno), reached by way of a large staircase and capable of being heated, lie directly above these on the piano nobile.

Several different painters worked on the decoration of the large hall on the ground floor (Salone Terreno). Its virtuoso wealth of forms, the scenographic bravura of its architectural painting, and its strikingly original programmatic concept, makes the room an outstanding example of seventeenth-century Florentine painting, standing as it does between tradition and modernism. The east wall of the Salone and the ceiling was painted by Giovanni da San Giovanni in 1635-36, the south wall by Cecco Bravo in 1638, the west wall by Ottavio Vannini in 1639-41, and the north wall by Francesco Furini in 1640-42.

The wall paintings deal with Lorenzo de’ Medici and the return of the Golden Age under his rule.

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun
Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun by

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun

This fresco is on the west wall of the Salone Terreno (Room of Giovanni da San Giovanni) on the ground floor of the Palazzo Pitti. It shows Lorenzo the Magnificent among the artists and writers of his time.

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun
Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun by

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun

This fresco is part of the wall decoration in the Room of Giovanni da San Giovanni in the Palazzo Pitti. It shows Lorenzo the Magnificent among the artists and writers of his time.

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun (detail)
Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun (detail) by

Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun (detail)

After almost two centuries, Grand Duke Fernando II paid homage in the Salone di San Giovanni in his palace to the patronage of his illustrious ancestor Lorenzo de’ Medici.

Scenes from the Reign of Cosimo II de' Medici
Scenes from the Reign of Cosimo II de' Medici by

Scenes from the Reign of Cosimo II de' Medici

During the renovation and extension of the Villa Poggio Imperiale under the reign of Pietro Leopoldo (1747-1792) who succeeded his father as Grand Duke of Tuscany when his eldest brother became emperor as Joseph II in 1765, the barrel vault painted in 1622-23 by Ottavio Vannini, was detached from the bearing wall and carefully shifted 11 m to the north. In 1818 it was moved once again in the same manner, this time into the addition to the northwest.

The our photo shows the present situation of the vault (called “volticina”) depicting scenes from the reign of Grand Duke Cosimo II de’ Medici who used the original room as his study.

View of the west wall
View of the west wall by

View of the west wall

The picture shows the west wall of the Salone Terreno (Room of Giovanni da San Giovanni) on the ground floor of the Palazzo Pitti. It shows Lorenzo the Magnificent with Artists and Virtues (left Prudentia and Abundantia; right Fides).

View of the west wall (detail)
View of the west wall (detail) by

View of the west wall (detail)

The picture shows a wall in the Room of Giovanni da San Giovanni in the Palazzo Pitti. The frescoes were commissioned for the marriage in 1635 between the Grand Duke Fernando II de’ Medici and Vittoria della Rovere. After the death of Giovanni da San Giovanni, these were finished by Ottavio Vannini, Francesco Furini, and Cecco Bravo between 1638 and 1642.

The scene below the window represents Michelangelo Showing Lorenzo il Magnifico the Head of a Faun.

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