Andrea Pozzo (1642–1709) – a master of painting illusion
Andrea Pozzo (1642–1709) – a master of painting illusion
Andrea Pozzo, painting imitating the dome, Church of Sant'Ignazio di Loyola
Andrea Pozzo, apparent dome in the Church of Sant’Ignazio di Loyola
Andrea Pozzo, paintings on the vault of the Church Sant'Ignazio di Loyola
Andrea Pozzo, series of watercolors attributed to the artist in the vestibule of the cell of St. Stanislaus Kostka, complex of the Church of Sant’Andrea al Quirinale
Andrea Pozzo, design of altar of St. John Berchmans, Church of Sant'Ignazio di Loyola
Andrea Pozzo, design of altar of St. Aloysius in the Church of Sant’Ignazio di Loyola
Andrea Pozzo, design of altar of St. Ignatius of Loyola, Church of Il Gesù
Andrea Pozzo, central part of the painting of the vault – The Apotheosis of St. Ignatius, Church of Sant'Ignazio
Andrea Pozzo, fragment of the vault of the Church of Sant’Ignazio
Andrea Pozzo, fragment of the vault of the Church of Sant’Ignazio
Andrea Pozzo, Casa Professa del Gesuiti at the Church of Il Gesù
Andrea Pozzo, Casa Professa del Gesuiti at the Church of Il Gesù
Andrea Pozzo, Convento Santissima Trinità dei Monti, frescoes in the refectory
Andrea Pozzo, Convento Santissima Trinità dei Monti, frescoes in the refectory
Andrea Pozzo, Convento Santissima Trinità, frescoes in the refectory
Andrea Pozzo, The Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary, Church of Sant'Andrea al Quirinale
His calling card was quadrature, a painting technique which allowed for the creation of an illusion of three-dimensionality on flat or vaulted surfaces. Thanks to it, at a relatively low cost it was possible to create columns, decorative pilasters, gilded cornices, marble putti and seemingly made of bronze figures of saints, nearly complete domes, reaching upwards above the head of the viewer, which looked as if they were made out of the actual materials.
His calling card was quadrature, a painting technique which allowed for the creation of an illusion of three-dimensionality on flat or vaulted surfaces. Thanks to it, at a relatively low cost it was possible to create columns, decorative pilasters, gilded cornices, marble putti and seemingly made of bronze figures of saints, nearly complete domes, reaching upwards above the head of the viewer, which looked as if they were made out of the actual materials.
The surname of this Jesuit monk is inseparably connected with the illusionist decoration of the ceiling of the Church of Sant’Ignazio di Loyola. Its significance cannot be overvalued – as it became an example for a whole slew of Baroque artists working on the decoration of Jesuit buildings spread throughout the world and that is not all. Pozzo was a creator of total art, an author of a vision, which in the eye of the viewer came together into one almost organic whole, architecture, sculpture and painting, but also the world of nature. And if we think that 3D technology is something new, we should enter this Roman church and see and experience, that our ancestors were familiar with it and used it a long time ago.
As a twenty-three year old youth, Andrea began his novitiate with the Jesuits in Milan. Besides a calling he was driven by the will to paint and design, which could be expressed under the patronage of the Society of Jesus which was open to science and art. He was a universal talent – painter architect, and a designer of the so-called small architecture (altars, occasional decorations), as well as a theoretician of art. In 1681, when he became known in Italian cities as an outstanding decorator, he was called by the Superior General of the Order to Rome. He was engaged in the works on the Church of Sant’Ignazio where he presented a novel solutions to the decorations of the part under the dome. The dome itself, due to financial reasons could not be built. Pozzo simply replaced it with canvas on which he painted apparent architecture in such a way that it provides an imitation of the real one. The effect he achieved was surprising indeed – it pleased not only the clients, but appealed to numerous viewers as well. The next confirmation of his talent was an imposing painting of the vault of this church, after which the anonymous monk became the number one artist in Rome.
After completing a few more works in the Eternal City, in 1702 he left Italy and went to Austria, where he worked mainly several clients mainly for Emperor Leopold I. He died in Vienna and was buried in the Jesuit church there.
Prior to leaving Rome, in 1693 he shared his knowledge of designing altars, tabernacles and other small objects in the work Perspectiva pictorum et architectorum, which was well-received in numerous countries, including China.
Church of Sant’Ignazio di Loyola – an area of false impressions and optical illusions
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