Portrait of Camillo Rospigliosi

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Portrait of Camillo Rospigliosi

Creator

Giovanni Battista Calandra

Italian Artist · 1586–1644

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Giovanni Battista Calandra was perhaps the greatest mosaic artist active in the early 1600s in Rome. Although he may have first studied painting in his native town, he moved to Rome after the death of his father in 1602 where he studied mosaic art with Marcello Provenzale. With the renewal of interest in Italian mosaics in the early 1600s, Provenzale worked as a restorer of ancient mosaics. He inv

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Date
about 1630–1640
Medium
Glass mosaic in gilt wood frame
Culture
Italian
Department
Sculpture
Institution
Getty Museum

Renaissance artists revived the mosaic technique from the early Christian period, considering it particularly appropriate for commemorative portraits since mosaic tiles, composed of ceramic or glass, preserved their color more permanently than paintings. Giovanni Battista Calandra here depicts Camillo Rospigliosi, brother of Pope Clement IX and Knight Commander of the Order of Santo Stefano, whose cross insignia adorns his chest. Despite the medium's technical challenges, Calandra reproduces some of the naturalistic techniques of contemporary painting. He may even have copied a painting, as was common practice among mosaicists. Calandra positions the sitter at a slight angle, employing perspective to represent the foreshortened chest and shoulders. In addition, he carefully renders the gradations of hair color resulting from changes in light and sfumato, the effect of light giving way to darkness behind the sitter. The embroidered cross showing through Rospigliosi's collar is a notable *tour de force* in subtle coloring. The portrait may have been part of a funerary monument or, alternately, Rospigliosi may have displayed it in his home.

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