Vincenzo Pagani (c.1490–1568) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance period.

Biography

Vincenzo was born at Monterubbiano, near Fermo in the region of March to a father who served as a magistrate, but also had an affinity for painting. He appears to have apprenticed in his father's workshop, being influenced by Carlo Crivelli (as shown by canvasses at Ortezzano, from c. 1510). Later he followed the path of Luca Signorelli, as exemplified by a canvas at Corridonia from c. 1517. He is said to have moved to Rome, and worked in the studio of Raphael, but like many other artists fled Rome after 1521, that is after the papacy of Leo X.[1] In Rome, he was described as a colleague of Morale da Fermo.[2]

After leaving Rome, he traveled to Rieti where he painted a Final Judgement fresco in the chapter hall of the Dominican Monastery.[3] He also painted altarpieces depicting an Enthroned Madonna (1517) for the Frati Minori at Monte dell'Olmo; a main altarpiece for the church or Sant'Angelo in Ripantranzone, and a Santa Lucia (1528) for the church of San Francesco in Sarnano.[4]

In the 1520s he was influenced by the Venetian painting school, which he had known from Antonio Solario, then at Fermo, and Lorenzo Lotto, who was working at Recanati. From this period are the Madonna with Four Saints (church at Moresco) and the altarpieces of San Ginesio (1533–1538), and Sant'Agostino, Ascoli Piceno.

Pagani's last recognized work is the Pala Oddi for the church of St. Francis in Perugia (1553).

References

  1. Memorie storiche delle arti e degli artisti della marca di Ancona, Volume 1, by Marchese Amico Ricci, publisher Tipografia di Alessandro Mancini, Macerata (1834), page 113-114.
  2. Guida storica e artistica della città di Fermo, by Dr Vincenzo Curi, Tipografia Bacher, Fermo (1864), page 95.
  3. Ricci, page 114.
  4. Ricci, pages 117-118.
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