Jacopo Coppi

(Redirected from Giacomo Coppi)

Jacopo Coppi, also called Giacomo Coppi[1] or "'Jacopo del Meglio'" ("the Best") (Peretola, 1546 – 1591) was an Italian painter, mainly active in Florence and Rome in a Mannerist style.[2] Other sources call him Giacinto Coppi.[3]

Judith with decapitated Holofernes
The Visitation

Biography edit

He was one of the team of painters under Giorgio Vasari engaged in the decoration of the Studiolo of Francesco I de' Medici in the Palazzo Vecchio, Florence. For the room, he depicted the Invention of Gunpowder and the Family of Darius before Alexander the Great.

 
Invention of Gunpowder
 
Family of Darius before Alexander the Great

Some of the sources dispute the identity of Coppi and Meglio. He is said to have painted in Rome and Bologna.[4]

Among his works are frescoes (1577) for the tribune of San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome; a painting of Ecce Homo for the church of Santa Croce in Florence, and a canvas of the Redeemer (1579) for the church of San Salvatore in Bologna.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ Reale Galleria di Firenze illustrata: Ritratti di pittori, volume 4, by Galleria degli Uffizi, Real Galleria di Firenze, page 160-162.
  2. ^ Garollo, Gottardo (1907). Ulrico Hoepli (ed.). Dizionario biografico universale. Editore Libraio della Real Casa, Milan. p. 574.
  3. ^ Collezione alfabetica di uomini e donne illustri della Toscana, by Filippo Brocchi, page 59.
  4. ^ Reale Galleria di Firenze illustrata: Ritratti di pittori. 4, By Galleria degli Uffizi, Real Galleria di Firenze, Page 160-164.
  5. ^ Reale Galleria di Firenze illustrata: Ritratti di pittori, volume 4, by Galleria degli Uffizi, page 160-162.