Online Encyclopedia

BACCIO

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 124 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BACCIO  D' AGNOLO (c . 1460–1543), Florentine

wood-carver, sculptor and architect., had the
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family name of Baglioni, but was always known by the abbreviation of Bartolommeo into Baccio and the use of d'Agnolo as meaning the son of Angelo, his
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father's name . He started as a wood-carver, and between 1491 and 1502 did much of the decorative
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carving in the church of
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Santa Maria Novella and the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence . Having made his reputation as a sculptor he appears to have turned his attention to architecture, and to have studied at Rome, though at what precise date is uncertain; but quite at the beginning of the 16th century he was engaged with Simon Pollajuolo in restoring the Palazzo Vecchio, and in 1506 he was commissioned to
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complete the drum of the cupola of the metropolitan church of Santa Maria del Fiore . The latter
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work, however, was interrupted on account of adverse criticisms from Michelangelo, and it remained unexecuted . Baccio d' Agnolo also planned the
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Villa
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Borghese and the Bartolini palace, with other
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fine palaces and villas . The Bartolini palace was the first house to be given frontispieces of columns to the door and windows, previously confined to churches; and he was ridiculed by the Florentines for his innovation . Another much-admired work by him was the campanile of the church of Santo Spirito . His studio was the resort of the most celebrated artists of the day, Michelangelo, Sansovino, the brothers
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Sangallo and the young Raphael . He died in 1543, leaving three sons, all architects, the best-known being Giuliano .

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