- Source: Giuseppe Sanmartino
Giuseppe Sanmartino (1720 – 1793) was a prominent Italian sculptor in Naples during the late Baroque period who focused on religious sculptures. His most famous work is the Veiled Christ (1753) in Sansevero Chapel in Naples.
Early life
Sanmartino was born in Naples. He trained in the workshop of Matteo Bottiglieri, as well as the studio of Domenico Antonio Vaccaro.
Career
His first dated (1753) work is Veiled Christ or Christ lying under the Shroud, commissioned initially from the Venetian sculptor Antonio Corradini who did not live to complete the work. Sammartino interpreted his sketches freely to create a masterly sculpture which can be seen in Sansevero Chapel (also called Cappella Sansevero or Pietatella) in Naples. Other contributors to this chapel were Francesco Celebrano and the Genoese sculptor Francesco Queirolo.
The statue of Veiled Christ is elaborately artificial (art historian Wittkower labeled it as a hypertrophic effort) by reproducing in stone the effect of a thin veil. In the same chapel, Corradini's antecedent statue of Chastity (also called Modesty) is present. Innocenzo Spinazzi, a contemporary Florentine sculptor, also completed statues with this effect.
Successful completion of this commission earned Sanmartino further commissions. These included the group of St. Augustine in the Neapolitan church of Sant'Agostino alla Zecca, the decoration of the Annunziata church, and the monument to Prince Filippo of Naples, Duke of Calabria in the Basilica of Santa Chiara. He also executed a series of nativity scenes.
References
External links
Web Gallery of Art
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Giuseppe Sanmartino
- Veiled Christ
- Giuseppe
- Antonio Corradini
- Cappella Sansevero
- Modesty (Corradini sculpture)
- The Veiled Virgin
- San Giuseppe Maggiore dei Falegnami
- Giuseppe Picano
- Capodimonte porcelain