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| Ghirlandaio, Domenico (1449-94). Florentine painter. He trained with Baldovinetti and possibly with
Verrocchio. His style was solid, prosaic, and rather old-fashioned (especially when compared with that of his great
contemporary Botticelli), but he was an excellent craftsman and good businessman and had one of the most prosperous
workshops in Florence. This he ran in collaboration with his two younger brothers, Benedetto (1458-97) and Davide
(1452-1525). His largest undertaking was the fresco cycle in the choir of Sta Maria Novella, Florence, illustrating
Scenes from the Lives of the Virgin and St John the Baptist (1486-90). This was commissioned by Giovanni Tornabuoni,
a partner in the Medici bank, and Ghirlandaio depicts the sacred story as if it had taken place in the home of
a wealthy Florentine burgher. It is this talent for portraying the life and manners of his time (he often included
portraits in his religious works) that has made Ghirlandaio popular with many visitors to Florence. But he also
had considerable skill in the management of complex compositions and a certain grandeur of conception that sometimes
hints at the High Renaissance. Ghirlandaio worked on frescos in Pisa, San Gimignano, and Rome (in the Sistine Chapel) as well as in Florence, and his studio produced numerous altarpieces. He also painted portraits, the finest of which is Old Man and his Grandson (Louvre); this depicts the grandfather's diseased features with ruthless realism, but has a remarkable air of tenderness. Ghirlandaio's son and pupil Ridolfo (1483-1561) was a friend of Raphael and a portrait painter of some distinction. His most famous pupil, however, was Michelangelo. |