Luzio Luzi
Luzio Luzi (sometimes Luzzi or Luci), also known as Luzio Luzi da Todi and Luzio Romano (died late 16th century), was an Italian painter, stuccoist, and draftsman of the High Renaissance era favoring the Mannerist style.[1]
Biography
Luzi was born in Todi, and started his painting career as an assistant to Perino del Vaga. He was mentioned by Giorgio Vasari in his Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects as one of Perino del Vaga's most important assistants, specializing in grotteschi and stucchi. He worked with del Vaga in Castel San Angelo, Rome, and in Palazzo Doria, Genoa. In 1545–1547, both del Vaga and Luzi were listed as master painters with a number of assistants.[2]
When Perino died on 19 October 1547, Luzi began collaborating with another Tuscan painter, Daniele da Volterra, assisting him in the Vatican.[3]
Gallery
- Castel Sant'Angelo, Rome
- Castel Sant'Angelo, Rome
- Design for a grotesque decoration, The MET
- Design for a candlestick, The MET
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luzio Luzi. |
- Falabella, S."Luzi, Luzio, detto Luzio Romano", In Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 66 (2007), Treccani Instituto (in Italian).
- Distance Points: Essays in Theory and Renaissance Art and Architecture by James S. Ackerman.
- The Papacy: Quietism-Zouaves, Pontifical by Philippe Levillain