The article focuses on the figure of Giuseppe Moriani (doc. in Florence between 1706 and 1756), to whom we propose attributing the 'Martyrdom of Saint Andrew' in the church of the Conservatorio delle Mantellate in Florence, a painting traditionally assigned to his teacher Giovanni Camillo Sagrestani. The news that in 1715 Giuseppe Moriani painted a 'Martyrdom of Saint Andrew' for the Compagnia di Sant'Andrea dei Purgatori in Florence – published en passant by Anna Padoa Rizzo in an article on Cosimo and Bernardo Rosselli in 1991 – has never before now entered into any discussion on the painter. Nor, as a consequence, has there been any attempt to trace the painting. In this context, and from an analytical re-reading of the documents, various pieces of evidence have emerged that now make it possible to identify the work as that in the church of the Mantellate and therefore to establish an important chronology for Moriani's career as an independent artist. Through an analysis of the painter's critical fortune and sustained by the objectivity of the documentary information, a framework of stylistic and chronological references has been reconstructed that has been crucial in placing the work in question within Moriani's production. This new information has contributed to a better understanding of his artistic personality, one that has been rather neglected by scholars – who have usually dealt with it in a fragmentary way – and in any case always considered subordinate to that of his teacher and other painters of his circle like Matteo Bonechi and Ranieri del Pace.
Index
Lorenzo Miletti, Stefania Tuccinardi
A poetical celebration of the Cortile delle Statue and the 'Cleopatra' in the Vatican: Aurelio Serena da Monopoli
read abstract » pag. 3-19
read abstract » pag. 3-19
Roberto Bartalini
“La piaga che Maria richiuse e unse”. More on the mural paintings by Ambrogio Lorenzetti in the chapel of San Galgano on Monte Siepi
read abstract » pag. 20-31
read abstract » pag. 20-31
Cristiana Pasqualetti
New light on Calderini Pontifical and manuscript decoration between L'Aquila and Rome during the Great Schism (with a mention of Zacara da Teramo, “scriptore et miniatore”)
read abstract » pag. 32-59
read abstract » pag. 32-59
Silvia Paltineri
A group of figure-decorated situlas from the Este area dating from the 5th-4th century BC. A possible interpretation
read abstract » pag. 60-68
read abstract » pag. 60-68
Antonio Mazzotta
More Venetian 'portraits' for Antonello, Jacometto and Andrea Previtali
read abstract » pag. 69-91
read abstract » pag. 69-91
Cristina Conti
Perino del Vaga and the 'Lamentation of Christ' in Santo Stefano del Cacco: a proposed dating
read abstract » pag. 92-95
read abstract » pag. 92-95
Camilla Colzani
Pellegrino Tibaldi and the painting of the Sala Regia in the Vatican: documents and drawings
read abstract » pag. 96-99
read abstract » pag. 96-99
Gennaro De Luca
The poet Giorgio Maria Rapparini and the arts at the Palatine court of Düsseldorf
read abstract » pag. 105-121
read abstract » pag. 105-121
Stefania Castellana
An incursion into the workshop of Sagrestani: Giuseppe Moriani and the 'Martyrdom of Saint Andrew' in the church of the Mantellate in Florence
read abstract » pag. 122-133
read abstract » pag. 122-133
Elisa Bruttini
“Antichità, e altre galanterie diverse”. The rudite collector Giovan Girolamo Carli
read abstract » pp.. 134-141
read abstract » pp.. 134-141
Nicol M. Mocchi
The Austro-German model for Italian painters in the age of Symbolism:hypotheses of visual appropriation
read abstract » pag. 142-165
read abstract » pag. 142-165
Eliana Carrara
Review of Le postille di padre Sebastiano Resta ai due esemplari delle «Vite» di Giorgio Vasari nella Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana and Le Postille di Padre Resta alle «Vite» di Baglione. Omaggio a Simonetta Prosperi Valenti Rodinò
read abstract » pag. 180-181
read abstract » pag. 180-181