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Lodovico Carracci

Bolognese, 1555 - 1619

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Biography

Born in Bologna in 1555, the son of a butcher, Lodovico Carracci grew up under the same roof as his cousins Agostino (1557-1602?) and Annibale (1560-1609), who became his closest collaborators. Probably while in his teens Lodovico became a pupil of the prominent Bolognese painter Prospero Fontana (1512-97). Lodovico's biographer, Carlo Cesare Malvasia, the richest source for information on the artist, noted he was slow to demonstrate his talent. Malvasia also reported that Lodovico furthered his education by traveling to Florence, Venice, Mantua, and Parma to study the great art of these cities. In 1578 Lodovico was inscribed as a master in the Corporation of painters of Bologna, and in 1582 he was named to the Council of the Corporation.

Lodovico's first known works date from the early 1580s when he was struggling to establish his position in Bologna. By the late 1580s Lodovico and his cousins were much in demand by local patrons and gaining reputations outside the city. Lodovico began a steady production of altarpieces, devotional pictures, and a smaller number of secular subjects for private patrons that would continue unabated until his death. By the mid 1590s the Carracci were Bologna's preeminent painters, and had attracted the region's best pupils, among them Guido Reni (1575-1642), Domenichino (1581-1641), and Francesco Albani (1578-1660).

Around 1582 Lodovico and his cousins Agostino and Annibale founded an academy that emphasized drawing from life and offered an opportunity to study optics, anatomy, and other subjects considered important to painters. The three artists collaborated on several fresco cycles in private palaces, the most important of which were a cycle of Jason and the Argonauts in the Palazzo Fava, completed in 1584, and a frieze depicting the Founding of Rome in the Palazzo Magnani, ca. 1590. They worked together so closely in their early years that in many cases scholars have found it difficult to distinguish between their hands. A conscious experimentation with style was a hallmark of the early Carracci Academy as the Carracci attempted to reform the chilly, abstruse elegance of the prevailing late mannerist style with an infusion of nature, comprehensibility, human warmth, and authentic expression.

After the departure of his cousins for Rome in the mid 1590s, Lodovico remained in Bologna to head the Carracci Academy and thriving studio. He traveled little and reluctantly. In 1602 he was briefly in Rome to visit Annibale and attend to business of the Corporation of Painters of Bologna, of which he was a leading member. The imprint on Lodovico's art of his Roman experiences was fleeting as well, in contrast to his cousin Annibale who remade his painting style in response to the art of Roman High Renaissance painting and antique sculpture.

A watershed in the history of illusionistic painting was the decoration in 1604-05 of the octagonal cloister in the Bolognese monastery of San Michele in Bosco with a cycle of the life of Saint Benedict interspersed with scenes from the life of Saint Cecilia. In addition to designing the overall scheme and executing several scenes, Lodovico used the occasion to show off the achievements of the Carracci Academy, attempting to enlist the best of the former pupils who had gone to Rome, and assigning work to even the most modest of his pupils. From 1605 to 1609 Lodovico made several visits to Piacenza where he was occupied with the decoration of the Cathedral in collaboration with Camillo Procaccini (1550/1555-1629). Here he used powerful, simplified forms that registered clearly in the huge spaces of the basilica, and the previous decade's sensuous approach to technique was irrevocably abandoned. Neither of these cycles, Lodovico's most ambitious commissions, survives intact.

Until the end of his life--he died in 1619--Lodovico was showered with commissions from important patrons both in Bologna and elsewhere in northern Italy. His works commanded the highest prices. Critics have been less enthusiastic about his late style, which is emphatically didactic and oscillates, depending upon the subject, from the stern and austere to finely-spun ethereal effects. More important for subsequent generations of artists, and especially for Guercino, was Lodovico's work of the 1590s. The sensuous quality of his paint, the powerful, tangible evocation of solid form, the innovative chiaroscuro, and dynamic approach to composition opened a path toward the baroque style. [This is an edited version of the artist's biography published in the NGA Systematic Catalogue]

Artist Bibliography

1841
Malvasia, Carlo Cesare. Felsina Pittrice. Vite de Pittori Bolognesi con aggiunte correzioni e note inedite dell'autore di Giampietro Zanotti e di altri scrittori. 2 vols. Originally published 1688. Bologna, 1841. Reprint. 1974: 1:264-368.
1939
Bodmer, Heinrich. Lodovico Carracci. Burg-bei-Magdeburg, 1939.
1956
Mostra dei Carracci. Dipinti. Exh. cat. Palazzo dell'Archiginnasio, Bologna, 1956.
1976
Volpe, Carlo. "Sugli inizi di Ludovico Carracci." Paragone 27/317-319 (1976): 115-129.
1984
Feigenbaum, Gail. "Lodovico Carracci: A Study of his Later Career and a Catalogue of his Paintings." Ph.D. diss., Princeton University, 1984.
1996
De Grazia, Diane, and Eric Garberson, with Edgar Peters Bowron, Peter M. Lukehart, and Mitchell Merling. Italian Paintings of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C., 1996: 54-55.

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