Giovanni Maria Falconetto
From Freepedia
Giovanni Maria Falconetto (Verona ca 1468–Padua 1535) was the artist and architect who designed the first fully Renaissance building in Padua, the Loggia Cornaro, a garden loggia for Alvise Cornaro built as a Roman doric arcade. He was among the most prominent painters of Verona and Padua in the early 16th century.
Falconetto was born into an established family of Veronese painters and studied in Rome for a time, in the studio of Melozzo da Forli. On his return to Verona his standing in his rione made him of use to Maximilian, who was headquartered in Verona 1509–1517, during the episode of the Italian Wars called the War of the League of Cambrai, and not simply for painting imperial arms to replace those of Venice that had been effaced on Maximilian's orders. With the return of a Venetian governor Falconetto and his family were proscribed and seem to have withdrawn to Trent.
Later his career was passed at Padua, where he was drawn by the patronage of Pietro Bembo and Alvise Cornaro, for whomFalconetto designed the Villa Cornaro at Este, (remodelled), of which an imposing adjacent gate remains. Cornaro's inmfluence with the Bishop of Padua doubtless elicited Falconetto's commission to design the Villa dei Vescovi ("Villa of the Bishops") at Luvigliano, in the Eugaean Hills.
Other works of architecture at Padua include the Loggia Carnica, the door of S. Giovanni Savonarola, the arch in Piazza dei Signori. Nearby, he designed the church at Codevigo.
As a painter, several works by Falconetto are in the Museo Civico housed in the Castelvecchio. His frescos in the Duomo reappeared in 1870 from under their coat of whitewash applied in 1630 at a time of plague. Frescoes securely attributed to Falconetto decorate the Sala dello Zodiaco in the Palazzo Di Bagno, Mantua, probably executed ca 1520 for a member of the Gonzaga family, as Vasari remarks, "he produced at Mantua several things for signor Luigi Gonzaga". [1] [2].
External links
- C.I. Gable, "Loggia Cornaro"
- Verona.com : Giovanni Maria Falconetto" (in Italian)
- Giovanni Pasetti, "Un ciclo zodiacale del Rinascimento" (in Italian)
- Rodolfo Signorini "Lo zodiaco del Falconetto" (in Italian)



