Various fresco decorations
by Pietro da CORTONA
Pietro da Cortona, painter and architect, was one of the founders of the Roman High Baroque, comparable with Bernini in sculpture. He painted his most famous work, the huge ceiling fresco, Allegory of Divine Providence and Barberini Power, for the palace of the Barberini family in Rome. This fresco is a huge illusion, with its central field apparently open to the sky and scores of figures seen coming into the room itself or floating above it. He painted similar frescoes in the Pitti Palace in Florence, where his Allegories of Virtues and Planets have elaborate stucco accompaniments uniting the painted ceilings with the framework of the rooms. This form of decoration was widely influential, not only in Italy, but also in France.
Cortona painted many other frescoes in Rome.
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View of the Galleria Pamphilj
1651-54
Fresco
Palazzo Pamphilj, Rome
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Ceiling of the Galleria Pamphilj
1651-54
Fresco
Palazzo Pamphilj, Rome
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Landing of the Trojans at the Mouth of Tiberis
1651-54
Fresco
Palazzo Pamphilj, Rome
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Apotheose of Aeneas (detail)
1651-54
Fresco
Palazzo Pamphilj, Rome
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Gallery vault
1622-23
Fresco
Palazzo Mattei di Giove, Rome
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Vision of St Filippo Neri
1664-65
Fresco
Santa Maria in Vallicella, Rome
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The Trinity in Glory
1648-51
Fresco
Santa Maria in Vallicella, Rome
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