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See also: Italian painter and architect, was See also: born in See also: Urbino about 1476
.
At the age of ten he was apprenticed to the woollen See also: trade, but showed so much inclination for See also: drawing that he was sent to study under an obscure painter, and at thirteen under Luca See also: Signorelli, with whom he remained a considerable while, frequently See also: painting the accessories of his pictures
.
He was afterwards for three years with Pietro See also: Perugino, in See also: company with See also: Raphael
.
He next worked in Florence and See also: Siena, along with Timoteo della Vite; and in the latter city he painted various compositions for Pandolfo See also: Petrucci, the leading See also: local statesman
.
Returning to Urbino, he was employed by Duke Guidobaldo in the decorations of his palace, and showed extraordinary aptitude for theatrical adornments
.
Thence he went to See also: Rome; and in the See also: church of S
.
Caterina da Siena, in that capital, is one of his most distinguished
See also: works, " The Resurrection," remarkable both for design and for colouring
.
He studied the See also: Roman antiquities with zeal, and measured a number of edifices; this practice, combining with his previous mastery of perspective, qualified him to shine as an architect
.
See also: Francesco Maria della Rovere, the reigning duke of Urbino, recalled See also: Genga, and commissioned him to execute works in connexion with his See also: marriage-festivities
.
This See also: prince being soon afterwards expelled by See also: Pope See also: Leo X., Genga followed him to See also: Mantua, whence he went for a See also: time to See also: Pesaro
.
The duke of Urbino was eventually restored to his dominions; he took Genga with him, and appointed him the ducal architect
.
As he neared the close of his career, Genga retired to a See also: house in the vicinity of Urbino, continuing still to produce designs in pencil; one, of the " Conversion of St See also: Paul," was particularly admired
.
Here he died on the 11th of See also: July 1551
.
Genga was a sculptor and musician as well as painter and architect
.
He was jovial, an excellent talker, and kindly to his See also: friends
.
His See also: principal pupil was Francesco Menzocchi
.
His own son Bartolommeo (1518–1558) became an architect of celebrity
.
In Genga's paintings there is a See also: great See also: deal of freedom, and a certain peculiarity of character consonant with his versatile, lively and social temperament
.
One of his leading works is in the church of S
.
Agostino in Cesena—a triptych in oil-See also: colours, representing the " See also: Annunciation," " See also: God the See also: Father in See also: Glory," and the " Madonna and See also: Child." Among his architectural labours are the church of See also: San Giovanni Battista in Pesaro; the See also: bishop's palace at Sinigaglia; the See also: facade of the See also: cathedral of Mantua, ranking high among the productions of the 16th century; and a new palace for the duke of Urbino, built on the See also: Monte Imperiale
.
He was also concerned in the fortifications of Pesaro
.
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