Artist was Bronzino’s favourite pupil
Prolific painter Alessandro Allori, whose style of painting was to influence many other famous artists in the late 16th century, was born on this day in 1535 in Florence.
Alessandro Allori's 1570 painting, The Pearl
Fishers, is considered to be his masterpiece
His father, who was a sword maker, died when he was five. The painter Agnolo Bronzino became guardian of the Allori family and little Alessandro spent a lot of his time in the artist’s workshop while he was growing up.
Bronzino was the court painter for Cosimo I de’ Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany. He painted mainly portraits, but also some religious and allegorical subjects. It is said that Allori was his favourite pupil.
Allori was so close to him that he incorporated Bronzino’s name into his own, as can be seen on the inscription on one of his paintings that was dated 1552 – Alessandro Allori, foster son of Agnolo Bronzino. He even sometimes signed himself Alessandro Bronzino or Alessandro Bronzino-Allori.
It was also Allori who completed Bronzino’s last fresco, The Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence, in Basilica di San Lorenzo in Florence, which Bronzino was unable to finish before his death in 1572.
Allori spent six years studying in Rome, where he was highly influenced by Michelangelo’s work. On his return to Florence, he also became one of the leading painters for the members of the Medici family who ruled Florence at the time.
Much of his work displays the complicated, twisting poses typical of Florentine Mannerist painting. To help him paint realistic figures he conducted anatomical research, which included the dissection of human corpses supplied by the Hospital of Santa Maria Nuova in Florence.
He painted altarpieces, frescoes and portraits and also designed tapestry, having been made director of the Florentine tapestry factory in the 1570s.
In 1570, Allori painted The Pearl Fishers, a landscape showing figures diving for pearls, for the Studiolo of Francesco I de’ Medici in Palazzo Vecchio and this is generally considered to be his masterpiece. Working under the guidance of Giorgio Vasari, Allori’s painting shows the influence of Michelangelo, with its figures in complex poses as they dived, which became emblematic of late Florentine Mannerism.
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| A self-portrait that Allori is thought to have painted in about 1555 |
Suffering from gout, Allori died in Florence in 1607. He is buried with many other famous artists from the period in the Cappella di San Luca (Chapel of the Painters) at the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata in Florence.
After his death, Allori’s style of painting was to influence artistic developments in Tuscany for another 50 years.
It is estimated that anywhere between 100 and 200 of Allori’s works have survived. The largest single collection is held by the Uffizi Gallery in Florence; others are in galleries around the world or in private collections.
One work, a 16th century portrait of Eleonora of Toledo, the first wife of Cosimo I de’ Medici, was returned to the Gemaeldegalerie in Berlin in 2006 after spending more than half a century in the possession of British broadcaster Charles Wheeler.
Wheeler, who worked as a foreign correspondent for the BBC for 61 years until his death in 2008, was given the painting, which measures only 16cm by 12cm, as a gift by a contributor to a programme he was making while working at the BBC’s Berlin Bureau in 1952.
He assumed it was a copy but liked it enough to take it with him on various assignments around the world before it found a more permanent home on a bookshelf in his office.
It was not until 54 years later, while making a programme about missing art, that he decided to look into the history of the painting.
His enquiries revealed that it was not a copy but a priceless original, one of an estimated 400 paintings at the Gemaeldegalerie that had been looted in destroyed during World War Two.
Travel tip:
The Palazzo Vecchio in Florence's Piazza
della Signoria is a familiar landmark
Palazzo Vecchio, which Allori helped to decorate with his painting, is the town hall of Florence. It overlooks the Piazza della Signoria as well as the gallery of statues in the Loggia dei Lanzi. The palace was originally called the Palazzo della Signoria, after the Signoria of Florence, the ruling body of the Republic of Florence. The building acquired its current name when the Medici Duke's residence was moved across the Arno to the Palazzo Pitti. The cubical palazzo is made of solid rusticated stonework topped by a simple tower with a clock, known as the Torre d’Arnolfo after its designer, Arnolfo di Cambio. The Palazzo Vecchio acquired renewed importance as the seat of united Italy's provisional government from 1865 to 1871, at a moment when Florence had become the temporary capital of the Kingdom of Italy. Although most of the building is now given over to a museum, since 1872 it has housed the office of the mayor of Florence, and it is the seat of the City Council.
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Travel tip:
The Basilica della Santissima Annunziata, with
its facade by Giovanni Battista Caccini
Alessandro Allori is buried in the Chapel of San Luca in the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata in Piazza della Santissima Annunziata. The chapel has belonged to the artists’ confraternity since 1565. Many artists are buried in its vault, including Benvenuto Cellini, and Pontormo. Inside there are murals by Alessandro Allori and works by other famous painters from his period. The Basilica, in the San Marco district of Florence, was founded by the Servite order in 1250 and later rebuilt by Michelozzo between 1444 and 1481. The facade of the church is by the architect Giovanni Battista Caccini. It was added in 1601 to imitate the Renaissance-style loggia of Filippo Brunelleschi's facade of the Foundling Hospital, which defines the eastern side of the piazza.
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More reading:
Bronzino, the Medici court painter who became the master of Mannerism
Giorgio Vasari, the painter and architect credited with being the first art historian
Cosimo I de’ Medici, the first Grand Duke of Tuscany
Also on this day:
1594: The death of painter Tintoretto
1914: The death of coffee machine pioneer Angelo Moriondo
1921: The birth of royal jeweller Andrew Grima
1970: The birth of film director Paolo Sorrentino

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