ABBATE, Niccolò dell' - b. 1509 Modena, d. 1571 Fontainebleau - WGA

ABBATE, Niccolò dell'

(b. 1509 Modena, d. 1571 Fontainebleau)

Painter of the Bolognese school who, along with others, introduced the post-Renaissance Italian style of painting known as Mannerism to France and helped to inspire the French classical school of landscape painting.

He began his career in Modena as a student of the sculptor Antonio Begarelli. His “Martyrdom of St. Peter and St. Paul” in the church of S. Pietro, Modena (1547), probably established his reputation. During his stay in Bologna (1548-52), his style matured, influenced by his contemporaries Correggio and Parmigianino. His stucco-surface landscapes in the Poggi (now Palazzo dell’Università) survive to show his understanding of nature.

In 1552 Abbate was called to the court of the king of France, Henry II, at Fontainebleau, and remained in France for the rest of his life. With Francesco Primaticcio he composed immense murals, most of them later lost. His easel works, which included an enormous number of lyrical landscapes based upon pagan themes, were burned in 1643 by the Austrian regent, Anna.

Among his later paintings executed for Charles IX were a series of landscapes with mythologies that influenced the 17th-century French painters Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin. He also designed a series of tapestries, “Les Mois arabesques,” and some of his designs were adopted by the painted enamel industry of Limoges. His last works are believed to be 16 murals (1571) in which he was assisted by his son, Giulio Camillo. His work in France is recognized as a principal contribution to the first significant, wholly secular movement in French painting, the Fontainebleau style.

Chimney breast
Chimney breast by

Chimney breast

The chimney breast was realized by the workshop of Niccolò dell’ Abbate. It features figures, putti, flowers, fruit, and symbols (among them the sword symbolizing the constable’s office) in trompe-l’oeil painting.

Chimney breast
Chimney breast by

Chimney breast

The chimney breast in the large royal hall was realized by the workshop of Niccolò dell’ Abbate. It features figures, putti, flowers, fruit, and symbols (among them the sword symbolizing the constable’s office) in pink, white, and black marble.

Death of Eurydice
Death of Eurydice by

Death of Eurydice

King Francis I of France concentrated his patronage of art and artists on the decoration of the Chateau of Fontainebleau. To this and he imported such major artists as he could. He did get the aging Leonardo, he imported Rosso in 1530, Primaticcio in 1532, then Niccolò dell’Abbate, Vignola, Andrea del Sarto, Cellini. Some stayed, some went back; but the work they left behind was decisive in the replacement of Gothic style in France.

The Fontainebleau decorations included a Long Gallery, a Ballroom and several royal rooms. Only a fraction survives, since much were destroyed in later rebuildings, and most of the paintings were drastically restored in the nineteenth century.

Niccolò dell’Abbate arrived about 1552. His main contribution was his fantastic landscapes, which are a genre quite apart from either the poetic realism found in late fifteenth-century Italian pictures, or the homely kind in the background of the Raphael cartoons. They have a dreamlike quality with extremes of light and colour, rainbows and flickering storms.

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Decoration
Decoration by

Decoration

In April 1528 Francis I commissioned Gilles Le Breton for a programme of building (completed 1540) at Fontainebleau. The Cour de l’Ovale was to be rebuilt using the old foundations and retaining the old keep, while a gallery, now the Galerie Fran�ois I, was to be constructed linking this with the Trinitarian abbey to the west, which was soon demolished and replaced by the Cour du Cheval Blanc. The north range of the Cour du Cheval Blanc survives almost unaltered and is of plastered rubble with brick dressings. The medieval gatehouse (now called the Porte Dor�e) in the south-west corner was rebuilt in Renaissance style, based on the entrance to the ducal palace at Urbino. Adjoining the Porte Dor�e to the east is the vast Salle de Bal, designed by Sebastiano Serlio, and next to it in turn is the Chapelle St-Saturnin, on the site of the original medieval chapel.

In 1530 Rosso Fiorentino was entrusted with the decorations of the interior, later joined (1532) by Francesco Primaticcio. Together they developed the style of the first Fontainebleau school, in effect the first extensive and consistent display of Mannerism in northern Europe.

The photo shows the Salle de Bal (also called Galerie Henri II) designed by Sebastiano Serlio (1541). The frescoes, designed by Primaticcio, were painted by Niccolò dell’Abbate in 1550.

Decoration (detail)
Decoration (detail) by

Decoration (detail)

The photo shows the Salle de Bal (also called Galerie Henri II) designed by Sebastiano Serlio (1541). The frescoes, designed by Primaticcio, were painted by Niccolò dell’Abbate in 1550.

Man with Parrot
Man with Parrot by

Man with Parrot

The portrait depicts a young man with parrot and pomegranate.

Meeting of Charles V and the Bey of Tunis
Meeting of Charles V and the Bey of Tunis by

Meeting of Charles V and the Bey of Tunis

Niccolò dell’Abbate was one of the most important artists of the first Fontainebleau school, which was developed at the French court by Rosso Fiorentino and Francesco Primaticcio, and he introduced the Italian Mannerist landscape into France.

Moses Rescued from the Nile
Moses Rescued from the Nile by

Moses Rescued from the Nile

Orlando Furioso scenes (detail)
Orlando Furioso scenes (detail) by

Orlando Furioso scenes (detail)

The interior of the Renaissance Palazzo Torfanini in Bologna were frescoed in 1549 by Niccolò dell’Abbate. The decoration represented scenes from Tasso’s Orlando Furioso. The frescoes were destroyed in 1732 when the palace was refurbished. The remaining parts of the frescoes are displayed in the Pinacoteca Nazionale.

Orlando Furioso scenes (detail)
Orlando Furioso scenes (detail) by

Orlando Furioso scenes (detail)

The interior of the Renaissance Palazzo Torfanini in Bologna were frescoed in 1549 by Niccolò dell’Abbate. The decoration represented scenes from Tasso’s Orlando Furioso. The frescoes were destroyed in 1732 when the palace was refurbished. The remaining parts of the frescoes are displayed in the Pinacoteca Nazionale.

Portrait of a Gentleman with a Falcon
Portrait of a Gentleman with a Falcon by

Portrait of a Gentleman with a Falcon

The portrait shows a gentleman, half length, wearing a black coat with grey sleeves and a hat, a falcon perched on his finger.

Niccolò dell’Abbate was associated with the Mannerist movement which was virtually a European court style in the first half of the sixteenth century. It was in the newly independent genre of landscape that dell’Abbate made his most enduring contribution to the history of Western art. In portraiture he was a canny observer of the interior life of his subjects, managing to suggest something of the uniqueness of their psychology. The north Italian aristocrat portrayed here has an almost indecisive air at odds with his masterful pose and sporty regalia.

Stag Hunt
Stag Hunt by

Stag Hunt

In a fabulous setting we see the last moments of a stag hunt. The very small size of the figures in the foreground does not prevent the artist from lingering over every detail of the elegant clothing, the hairstyles and the harness of the horses. We sense a refined climate of diversion that was certainly inspired by the Estense court of the castle of Ferrara, from which “Camerini” this painting probably comes. The natural scenery, which shows the influence of Dosso Dossi’s landscapes and numerous aspects of Flemish art, is lit up in the background by unreal flashes of light, oscillating between pale pink and gray-green, from which ruins emerge, the spires of fairytale works of architecture.

The Continence of Scipio
The Continence of Scipio by

The Continence of Scipio

This painting is typical of the elegant art emerging in Fontainebleau inspired by Primaticcio.

The Rape of Proserpine
The Rape of Proserpine by

The Rape of Proserpine

In this painting - which may belong to a series of landscapes painted in 1570 for the Cabinet du Roi in the Château de Fontainebleau - the artist applies the formula of a vast landscape animated by small, graceful figures. He takes as his source works by Joachim Patenier.

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