Online Encyclopedia

MORTO DA FELTRE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 247 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MORTO DA

FELTRE  ,
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Italian painter of the Venetian school, who worked at the close of the 15th century and beginning of the 16th . His real name appears to have been Pietro Luzzo; he is also known by the name Zarato or Zarotto, either from the place of his
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death or because his
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father, a surgeon, was in Zara during the son's childhood: whether he was termed Morto (dead) from his joyless temperament is a disputed point . He may probably have studied
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painting first in Venice, but under what master is uncertain . At an early age he went to Rome, and investigated the ancient, especially the subterranean remains, and thence to Pozzuoli, where he painted from the decorations of antique crypts or " grotte." The style of fanciful
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arabesque which he formed for himself from these studies gained the name of " grottesche," whence comes the
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term "
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grotesque"; not, indeed, that Morto was the first painter of arabesque in the Italian Renaissance, for
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art of this kind had, apart from his influence, been fully
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developed, both in painting and in sculpture, towards 148o, but he may have powerfully aided its diffusion southwards . His
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works were received with much favour in Rome . He afterwards went to Florence, and painted some
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fine grotesques in the Palazzo Pubblico . Returning to Venice towards 1505, he assisted Giorgione in painting the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, and seems to have remained with him till 1511 . If we may
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trust Ridolfi, Morto eloped with the
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mistress of Giorgione, whose grief at this transaction brought him to the
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grave; the allegation, however, is hardly reconcilable with other accounts . It may have been in 1515 that Morto returned to his native Feltre, then in a very ruinous condition from the ravages of war in 1509 . There he executed various works, including some frescoes, still partly extant, and considered to be almost worthy of the hand of Raphael, in the loggia beside
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San Stefano . Towards the age of
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forty-five, Morto, unquiet and dissatisfied, abandoned painting and took to soldiering in the service of the Venetian republic . He was made captain of a troop of two
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hundred men; and fighting valorously, he is said to have died at Zara in Dalmatia, in 1519 .

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story, and especially the date of it, are questionable: there is some reason to think that Morto was painting as
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late as 1522 . One of his pictures is in the Berlin museum, an allegorical subject of " Peace and War." Andrea Feltrini was his pupil and assistant as a decorative painter .

End of Article: MORTO DA FELTRE
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