The Medici had continuously ruled Florence in 1434-94. But the Medici family only returned to power in 1512, after Florence had lost its identity and become a pawn in stormy European politics. Florence changed from a republic with elected officials .. to one ruled by Medici.
And the key figure in this transformation was 17 year old Cosimo I de Medici from a minor branch of an elite family, who became Duke of Florence in 1537, after his predecessor Alessandro de' Medici was murdered. Cosimo had been selected by power brokers in Florence who believed they could control him. But instead he grabbed control from elected officials, establishing himself as an autocrat. Florence was made important again, even with a tyrant, and the city was grateful.
And the key figure in this transformation was 17 year old Cosimo I de Medici from a minor branch of an elite family, who became Duke of Florence in 1537, after his predecessor Alessandro de' Medici was murdered. Cosimo had been selected by power brokers in Florence who believed they could control him. But instead he grabbed control from elected officials, establishing himself as an autocrat. Florence was made important again, even with a tyrant, and the city was grateful.
Alessandro de' Medici Duke of Florence, 1534
by Jacopo Pontormo,
Credit: Philadelphia Museum of Art
To convert the mercantile city into the capital of a Medici state, Cosimo enlisted the leading intellectuals, promoting grand architectural, engineering and art projects. Explore how Cosimo and the other Medici used the era’s dominant medium, art, as propaganda, clarifying that Florence was still a power to reckon with. See what Florentines thought about influence and the central role that arts and culture played in Renaissance politics. Cosimo’s goal was to see how he and his circle used the arts to promote the Medici brand.
Portraits, a very personal subject, provided a seductive way to explore politics and patronage. They became an essential means of noting sitters’ likeness, character, social position and cultural ambitions
In Giorgio Vasari's famous book Lives of the Artists (1550), which was dedicated to the Duke, Florence was promoted as the heart of the Renaissance. He had nurtured the idea of Florence as the intellectual powerhouse of the Renaissance and the Medici as the key players.
The 2021 exhibition displayed a bronze bust of Cosimo I de' Medici 1545 by Cellini, on loan from the Museo Nazionale del Bargello in Florence. In 1557 the bust found a permanent home above the main fortress gate on Elba Island. Its piercing gaze and Roman-ish armour conveyed Cosimo’s power, building on imperial iconography to link the Medici and Italy’s ancient leaders. Specialists saw that its eyes had been crafted out of silver, a preference pioneered in the classical civilisations that Renaissance artists copied centuries later. Thus it was restored.
bronze bust of Cosimo I de' Medici 1545 by Cellini
Credit Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence
by Jacopo Pontormo,
Credit: Philadelphia Museum of Art
To convert the mercantile city into the capital of a Medici state, Cosimo enlisted the leading intellectuals, promoting grand architectural, engineering and art projects. Explore how Cosimo and the other Medici used the era’s dominant medium, art, as propaganda, clarifying that Florence was still a power to reckon with. See what Florentines thought about influence and the central role that arts and culture played in Renaissance politics. Cosimo’s goal was to see how he and his circle used the arts to promote the Medici brand.
Portraits, a very personal subject, provided a seductive way to explore politics and patronage. They became an essential means of noting sitters’ likeness, character, social position and cultural ambitions
In Giorgio Vasari's famous book Lives of the Artists (1550), which was dedicated to the Duke, Florence was promoted as the heart of the Renaissance. He had nurtured the idea of Florence as the intellectual powerhouse of the Renaissance and the Medici as the key players.
The 2021 exhibition displayed a bronze bust of Cosimo I de' Medici 1545 by Cellini, on loan from the Museo Nazionale del Bargello in Florence. In 1557 the bust found a permanent home above the main fortress gate on Elba Island. Its piercing gaze and Roman-ish armour conveyed Cosimo’s power, building on imperial iconography to link the Medici and Italy’s ancient leaders. Specialists saw that its eyes had been crafted out of silver, a preference pioneered in the classical civilisations that Renaissance artists copied centuries later. Thus it was restored.
Credit Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence
Other works also connected the family to classical culture eg Cosimo I de’ Medici as Orpheus (1537–9) by Bronzino. He cast the Duke as the mythological musician Orpheus, aligning him with greater forces. A marble bust of an aging Cosimo by sculptor Giovanni Bandini showed him as a Roman emperor, timeless in his authority.
Portraits and Politics had 6 sections that started in the early C16th when the family newly returned from exile. See how the High Renaissance rulers cemented their power through commissioning culture and associating with artists. The exhibition’s first sections covered 1512-34, introducing us to relatives like Pope Clement VII, Lorenzo the Magnificent’s nephew and Alessandro de’ Medici, who ?was the son of Lorenzo di Piero, Duke of Urbino. [The family actually produced four popes: Leo X, Clement VII, Pius IV and Leo XI].
Then inspect Cosimo himself. See how the Duke and his immediate family, including 1st wife Eleonora of Toledo (d1572), used portraits to project power, assert Medici continuity and convey cultural refinement! Bronzino painted Eleonora, posing alongside each of her sons. Placing each son next to mum said that the next generation would create branches from the invigorated dynastic trunk.
Portraits and Politics had 6 sections that started in the early C16th when the family newly returned from exile. See how the High Renaissance rulers cemented their power through commissioning culture and associating with artists. The exhibition’s first sections covered 1512-34, introducing us to relatives like Pope Clement VII, Lorenzo the Magnificent’s nephew and Alessandro de’ Medici, who ?was the son of Lorenzo di Piero, Duke of Urbino. [The family actually produced four popes: Leo X, Clement VII, Pius IV and Leo XI].
Then inspect Cosimo himself. See how the Duke and his immediate family, including 1st wife Eleonora of Toledo (d1572), used portraits to project power, assert Medici continuity and convey cultural refinement! Bronzino painted Eleonora, posing alongside each of her sons. Placing each son next to mum said that the next generation would create branches from the invigorated dynastic trunk.
Bronzino, Eleanora of Toledo and son Giovanni, 1545
Photo credit: Ufizzi
The second half of Portraits and Politics examined those whose art elevated Florence to new cultural heights. It put together the work of Bronzino, the Mannerist artist who was Cosimo’s court painter, and Francesco Salviati, whose pan-Italian style competed with Bronzino’s clearly Florentine-based art. And the exhibition celebrated the city’s literary culture, linked to portraiture. But as realistic as the facial image was, this alone could not convey the most intimate aspects of the sitter. Identity was embedded in symbols, in codified formal language capable of explaining concepts previously confined to poetry. NB Bronzino’s restored Portrait of Poet Laura Battiferri. Laura’s likeness explicitly referenced 2 other famous Florentine poets: her Dante profile and her Petrarch verses.
Not all of the people featured were well-known eg his ancestor Cosimo the Elder on the catalogue cover. Cosimo the Elder was not a Medici, but was the son of a wealthy Florentine banker. Nonetheless the work was described as a masterpiece of C16th portraiture, summarising the power of art as propaganda. The young man with a medallion portrait of a woman near his chest was filled with symbolism.
The catalogue closed with a quote from the Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci, acknowledging the staying power of great art. Now read The Medici Family in History Today and The Medici: Portraits and Politics, 1512–70 (see above).
The catalogue closed with a quote from the Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci, acknowledging the staying power of great art. Now read The Medici Family in History Today and The Medici: Portraits and Politics, 1512–70 (see above).
I had a blonde moment when I read portraits and thought photo, saw the year 1512 and thought what the hell cameras were not around then. My brain is still trying to wake up and yes I know you were talking about paintings but my brain didn't go there straight away. These ones shown here are damn good and the post was interesting, well as interesting as my half asleep brain could manage.
ReplyDeleteDe Medici is a well-known and well-remembered name along history. The members of this Florence located family, greatly promoted their political influence through arts and culture.
ReplyDeleteOh yes, love the Medici.
ReplyDeleteI have watched quite a few documentaries and even the netflix series about them.
Thanks for the interesting read. I hope the exhibition comes to London.
Helen I love it.
ReplyDeleteYou said that Cosimo the Elder was not a Medici, but was the son of a wealthy Florentine banker. Which only goes to show that genetic inheritance was only half the story. Good connections and important patronage counted just as much.
I really like the last painting, it feels real Hels.
ReplyDeleteJo-Anne
ReplyDeleteYou had that moment only because the 16th century portraits provided a wonderful means of realistically painting likeness, character, social position and cultural ambitions. Had these paintings been abstract, non realistic and uber modern, you would not have thought they were the work of cameras.
DUTA Cosimo grabbed power first, and then established his dynasty as one of learning, arts, cultural refinement and imperialism down the generations. Helen's line is quite right: to convert the mercantile city into the capital of a Medici state, Cosimo enlisted the leading intellectuals, promoting grand architectural, engineering and art projects.
ReplyDeleteLiam
ReplyDeleteThank you. It will be very important for the blog readers and students to find the Netflix series about the Medici. I will publish the details in this blog if I can find them.
Deb
ReplyDeleteI agree that in that society in that century, good connections and powerful patronage counted a great deal. Cosimo emphasized how he specifically enlisted the leading intellectuals for his grand architectural, engineering and art projects.
Margaret, There were many Medici portraits that projected power and conveyed cultural refinement! But painting the mother and son together was suggesting that family strength and continuity were the most important qualities. It felt very real.
ReplyDeleteThe Medici Private Tour, Florence – the family and the TV series
ReplyDeleteA unique private tour to find out more about the Medici Family and the essence of their main characters. This Italian banking family had a political dynasty that began under Cosimo de' Medici in the Republic of Florence during the 15th century. A family who encouraged the careers of several artists as Michelangelo. A family that ruled Florence and, later, Tuscany becoming the symbol of a city and a very important part of its history.
This unique walking itinerary will take you to Palazzo Medici Riccardi, the first palace of the Family and home of Cosimo il Vecchio and Lorenzo il Magnifico. Here worked artists as Donatello, Michelangelo, Paolo Uccello, Benozzo Gozzoli and Botticelli. Also walk by Palazzo Strozzi, Palazzo Albizi and Palazzo Pazzi, amazing palaces of the Medici's enemy families. Discover the places where many of the scenes of the tv series “THE MEDICI” took place.
Many thanks for the information. I have been all around the inside of the Florence Museum myself, but that was years ago and I had no idea about The Medici Private Tour outside the museum. The tour outside will give a much more complete view of the Medicis.
ReplyDeleteNow the big question. During the 3 hour walk, is there a chance to sit and drink an espresso :)
This sounds like a really worthwhile and serious exhibition, not enough art shows put the works into the context of their time, even now. And there is no substitute for seeing the art works themselves, gathered in the same place. I really do hope this show comes to London eventually. I've been a couple of times to Florence, and each time I left feeling dissatisfied, as if I was missing so much. If I ever see this show I feel it would help me to fill in some of the gaps I still have about this extraordinary family and their world.
ReplyDeleteJenny
ReplyDeleteI would prefer to see each work in the place it came originally from, seeing paintings as part of the family's or church's total decorative art plan. I am delighted that the paintings were not destroyed or hidden, and were given to galleries for safe keeping. But each gallery wall is naked, except for one or two paintings, and the floors are totally empty.
Having said that, I would give my second kidney to be able to personally inspect The Medici: Portraits and Politics, 1512–70.