Menu Shopping cart
Your basket is empty.
Support us
PISAVA
VELIKOST

CTRL+ ZA POVEČAVO
CTRL- ZA POMANJŠAVO

VELIKE/MALE
STIL
Permanent Collection

Pier Francesco Mola - 1600–1700

(Ticino, 1612 – Rome, 1666)

Born 1612 in Coldrerio in the Ticino, died 1666 in Rome. He was the son of the architect Giovanni Battista, with whom he moved to Rome when he was four. His teachers were Prospero Orsi and Giuseppe Cesari, called Cavalier d’Arpino. Between 1633 and 1647 he went to northern Italy. In Bologna he worked for two years in the workshop of Francesco Albani, in Venice he came under the influence of Titian, Veronese and the Bassanos. In 1641 he painted in the Oratorio del Carmine in his native town and returned to Rome in 1647, where he received commissions from members of the Roman families of Pamphilj, Chigi and Costaguti, from Cardinal Omodei and others. In 1662 he became head of the Accademia di San Luca. In 1656 he secured a commission for the frescoes in the Quirinal Palace through the intercession of Pietro da Cortona. Mola’s work ranges from commissions for large canvases to small paintings, which are characteristic of him and include biblical, mythological, poetic and allegorical motifs. These are depictions of landscapes into which he set small figures of saints and hermits. Mola’s work was already appreciated during his lifetime, especially in Paris and at the French court, which was about to appoint him court painter when death overtook him.

Lit.: Pier Francesco Mola: 1612-1666, Milano 1989 [ex. cat., Lugano, Museo Cantonale d'Arte; Roma, Musei Capitolini]; Seicento, Vol. I-II, Milano 1989, (biogr. Laura Laureati).
From Mannerism to Baroque
Although imported early-Baroque works prevailed in this period and those by itinerant artists, the 17th century paved the way for the future. The political circumstances in the region were relatively stabilized in spite of the Thirty Year War and the patronage gradually grew stronger. The arrival of the Jesuits in Ljubljana, the activity of the polymath Johann Weichard Valvasor, particularly his graphic workshop at Bogenšperk/Wagensperg Castle, and the foundation of the Academia operosorum at the end of the century were the key events of the time. 

Characteristic of sculptural production on the Slovenian territory in the 17th century were the so-called “golden altars”. As a rule, these were gilded and polychrome carved wooden retables with rich ornamentation, first with crustaceous patterns which turned into vine and grapes that covered architectural framework until the achantus foliage took over and obliterated architectural structure completely. The making of golden altars included several branches of fine arts: prints, carving, gilding, painting. Religious painting of the first half of the century still contains Mannerist elements; in the second half also secular motifs became more numerous, particularly genre scenes and aristocratic portraits. The artworks mainly echo northern early-Baroque influences. 

Noteworthy among the newcomers who settled in Carniola with their workshops were the painter and gilder Hans Georg Geiger von Geigerfeld in the mid-century, who had moved to Carniola from the region of the Central Alps, and the Fleming Almanach in the third quarter of the 17th century, known only by his nickname, who worked here only for a few years. The extraordinary productivity and skills of the latter are evidenced by his rare surviving works, mentions in Valvasor’s books, and aristocratic probate inventories.