1560 in art
Events from the year 1560 in art.
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Events
- Giorgio Vasari begins work on the Uffizi in Florence for Cosimo I de' Medici as offices for the Florentine magistrates.[1]
Works
- Pieter Bruegel the Elder – Children's Games[2]
- Valerio Cioli - Fontana del Bacchino at the Boboli Gardens in Florence[3]
- Juan de Juanes – The Last Supper
- Maso da San Friano – Visitation (altarpiece)
- Antonis Mor – Portrait of the artist Jan van Scorel
- Steven van der Meulen – Elizabeth Clinton
- Karel van Mander – Prince Christian of Denmark
Births
- June 25 – Juan Sánchez Cotán, Spanish painter (died 1626)[4]
- November 3 – Annibale Carracci, Italian painter (died 1609)[5]
- date unknown
- Giovanni Balducci, also called Il Cosci, Italian mannerist painter (died 1600)
- Bartolomeo Carducci, Italian painter (died 1608)[6]
- Wenceslas Cobergher, Flemish Renaissance architect, engineer, painter, antiquarian, numismatist and economist (died 1634)
- Adriaen Collaert, Flemish engraver (died 1618)[7]
- Dominicus Custos, Flemish printer and copperplate engraver (died 1612)
- Bartholomeus Dolendo, Dutch engraver (died unknown)
- Giovanni Niccolo, Italian Jesuit painter (died 1626)
- Diego Polo the Elder, Spanish painter (died 1600)
- Claudio Ridolfi, Italian painter (died 1644)
- Daniel Soreau, German still life painter (died 1619)
- Antonio Viviani, Italian painter of frescoes (died 1620)
- probable
- Ludovico Buti, Italian painter active mostly in Florence (died 1611)
- Baldassare d'Anna, Italian painter of the late-Renaissance period (died 1639)
- Paolo Camillo Landriani, Italian painter (died 1618)
- Arent Passer, stonemason and architect (died 1637)
- Marietta Robusti, Venetian painter of the Renaissance period (died 1590)
- Fabrizio Santafede, Italian late-Mannerist painter (died 1635)
- Domenico Tintoretto, Venetian painter, son of Jacopo Tintoretto (died 1635)[8]
- 1560/1561: Rafael Sadeler I, Flemish engraver of the Sadeler family (died 1628/1632)
Deaths
- February 7 – Bartolommeo Bandinelli, Florentine sculptor (born 1493)[9]
- date unknown
- Antonio Badile, Italian painter from Verona (born 1518)[10]
- Giovanni Battista Caporali, Italian painter (born c.1476)
- Francesco Vecellio, Venetian painter of the early Renaissance (born 1485), best known as the elder brother of the painter Titian.
- probable
- Hans Sebald Lautensack, German painter and etcher (born 1524)
- Herri met de Bles, Flemish Mannerist landscape painter (born c.1510)
- Frans Mostaert, Flemish landscape painter (born 1428)
- Heinrich Zell, German printer and cartographer (born unknown)
References
- Iain Fenlon (1989). The Renaissance: From the 1470s to the End of the 16th Century. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 389. ISBN 978-0-333-52652-1.
- Rhonda L. Clements (1995). Games and Great Ideas: A Guide for Elementary School Physical Educators and Classroom Teachers. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-313-29460-0.
- Morgante Dwarf from Boboli Garden Frilli Gallery. Catalogue
- William B. Jordan; Sarah Schroth (1985). Spanish Still Life in the Golden Age, 1600-1650. Kimbell Art Museum. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-912804-19-4.
- Ira Moskowitz (1976). Great Drawings of All Time: Italian, thirteenth through nineteenth century. Kodansha International. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-87011-263-8.
- James R. Hobbes (1849). The Picture Collector's Manual: Alphabetical arrangement of scholars and masters and classification of subjects. T. & W. Boone. p. 44.
- Maggs Bros (1962). Bibliotheca Americana. Maggs bros. p. 81.
- Fern Rusk Shapley (1973). Paintings from the Samuel H. Kress Collection: Italian Schools: XVI-XVIII century. Phaidon P. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-7148-1547-3.
- Derek Parker (2003). Cellini: Artist, Genius, Fugitive. Sutton. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-7509-2957-8.
- Ivan Fenyo; Iván Fenyő (1966). North Italian Drawings from the Collection of the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts. October House. p. 84.
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