Gerino da Pistoia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gerino da Pistoia, also Gerino di Antonio Gerini, (1480–1529) was an Italian painter and designer of the Renaissance.

Biography[edit]

Not much is known about Gerino except through his works and a few lines by Giorgio Vasari. Gerino was a pupil of Pietro Perugino and trained in his workshop. He traveled to Rome with Pinturicchio.[1]

The Courtauld Gallery was awarded a grant in 2011 to restore and study a surviving work of his Virgin and Child Enthroned with Saints Lawrence, John the Baptist, Monica and Augustine (1510) which was originally made for the church of Sant'Agostino in Sansepolcro.[2]

Some of his works include:

  • Madonna with St. Michael and St. Peter, in the annex to the oratory of the church of San Alessandro in Milan
  • Madonna (1502), painted relief, Museo Civico, Sansepolcro
  • San Jacopo, Basilica of Our Lady of Humility
  • Madonna and Child with Saints Anthony Abbot and Nicolas of Bari, church San Giorgio a Porciano, Lamporecchio
  • Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes (1513), fresco in dining hall of the convent San Lucchese, Poggibonsi
  • St Jerome Penitent, Museum of the Cathedral of San Zeno, Pistoia
  • Franciscan saints, fifty medallions by Gerino and his students (1501–1509), corridor of the convent of the sanctuary of Chiusi della Verna

References[edit]

  1. ^ Guida di Pistoia per gli amanti delle belle arti con notizie, by Francesco Tolomei, 1821, page 176–177.
  2. ^ "Courtauld Gallery News update" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-11.
  • Jodie Rogers Mariotti, historienne d'art, spécialiste de Gerino from Pistoia Pistoia Gerino from the Verna. A sixteenth-century fresco cycle in the light returned, Ed. Pazzini, 2007 (ISBN 88-89198-83-4)