The early work of Scipione Pulzone typifies…
1585 CE
The early work of Scipione Pulzone typifies the sixteenth-century International style.
Little is known of Pulzone's personal life; it is believed that he had been a pupil of Jacopino del Conte.
In his painting of the Assumption of the Virgin (1585; Rome), Pulzone displays references to pre-Mannerist, Venetian, and Sienese traditions in his style of religious figuration.
The artist paints many of the aristocracy and clerics of Rome, including Gregory XIII, Cardinal de' Medici and the Grand Duke Ferdinand de Medici, Eleonora de' Medici, and Maria de' Medici.
He also paints an Assumption with the Apostles for San Silvestro al Quirinale; a Pietà for the Gesu; and a Crucifixion for Santa Maria in Vallicella.
The Portrait of Cardinal Alessandro Farnese (National Gallery, Rome) and Portrait of a Cavalier (Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome) are characteristic of his work.
His Mater Divinae Providentiae, painted around 1580, will in the coming centuries inspire the Roman Catholic cult of devotion to Our Lady of Providence.