Tanzio da Varallo

Tanzio da Varallo, David and Goliath, c. 1625 (Pinacoteca civica, Varallo)

Antonio d'Enrico, called Tanzio da Varallo, or simply il Tanzio[1] (c. 1575/1580 – c. 1632/1633) was an Italian painter of the late-Mannerist or early Baroque period.

Biography

He was born in Riale d’Alagna, and was active mainly in Lombardy and Piedmont, including the Sacro Monte at Varallo Sesia, where he worked contemporaneously with Pier Francesco Mazzucchelli (il Morazzone). He painted a Circumcision for Fara San Martino, and a Virgin with saints for the Collegiate at Pescocostanzo. Some of his paintings acquire the influence of Tenebrist styles and morbid thematic characteristic of the followers of Caravaggio and also of many Lombard painters, including his somewhat gruesome David with Goliath (1620). His animated and crowded Battle of Sennacherib (1627–28) for the Basilica of San Gaudenzio[2] reflects the influence of his work in the Sacri Monti of Piedmont and Lombardy, painting scenographic diorama scenes.

His brother Melchiorre was also a painter, studied in Milan, and painted a last judgement for the parish of Riva.[3]

Works

Sources

Footnotes

  1. Tanzio derives from the patronym d’Anz, i.e., ‘son of Anz’, his father’s name Giovanni being Anz in the German dialect spoken at Alagna.
  2. Battle of Sannacherib is housed in the Museo Civico de Novara.
  3. Le glorie dell'arte lombarda, by Luigi Malvezzi, 1882, page 255.

External links

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