Arcimboldo: biography
Giuseppe Arcimboldi was born in Milan, the son of Biagio, a painter, and of Chiara Parisi. He trained with his father, and both of them are recorded in the annals of the Milan Cathedral workshop from 1549. By 1558, Giuseppe had executed the designs for a number of stained-glass windows for the Cathedral, and in the same year he designed the cartoon of a tapestry depicting the Transit of the Virgin for Como Cathedral. In the same period he also painted the Tree of Jesse fresco in Monza Cathedral. In 1562 he was called to the imperial court of Ferdinand I in Prague to work as a portraitist. The first series of Seasons, that includes Summer and Winter (Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum), dates from the following year, 1563. Arcimboldi retained his post as a portraitist under Ferdinand’s successors, Maximilian II and Rudolf II. In 1566 he executed the Elements series – Water and Fire are housed in Vienna – and in the same year he made a brief trip to Italy. Arcimboldi also worked for Maximilian II as scenery and costume designer, musician, poet and inventor of ephemeral devices and in 1570 he took an active part in the festivities to celebrate the marriage of the Emperor’s daughter, Elisabeth, to Charles IX of France. In 1577 he painted a new series of the Seasons for Rudolf II, who also sent him to Bavaria to gather items for his collection of antiques and curiosities. Although he remained on excellent terms with the Emperor, Arcimboldi returned to Milan in 1587 at the age of sixty. In 1591 he sent Rudolf II a beautiful portrait in the guise of Vertumnus, which the Emperor liked so much he bestowed the the title of Count Palatine on him in 1592, just a year before his death in Milan on 11 July 1593.
Arcimboldo: the works
Tree of Jesse
anteriore al 1562As a result of some fairly recent documentary findings, it has been possible to attribute to the period prior to Arcimboldi’s departure for Prague (1562) a number of fresco scenes in Monza Cathedral, in particular the one depicting the Tree of Jesse, which occupies the entire wall of the right transept. Only recently has some light been thrown on Arcimboldi’s early work in Italy, but it is probable that with his Milanese background he was steeped in the culture of Leonardo, Bramantino and Gaudenzio Ferrari, with a special preference for the caricatures and anatomical studies of the Tuscan artist, which would later exercise a strong influence in his development of the composite heads. In this Italian work by Arcimboldi, it is also possible to note the influence of Flemish painting and of the Campi from Cremona.
IconographyWinter
1563Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. Spring faces left (as does Autumn) and is depicted in his early youth with a face brimming with flowers, Summer is an adolescent, Autumn is an elderly, bearded figure and Winter is an old man with a straggly, unkempt beard and withered bark-skin. Besides the evident influence of transalpine figurative culture, Arcimboldi appears to demonstrate a profound knowledge of the work of Leonardo and the personification of Winter closely recalls Leonardo’s caricatures. Furthermore, the interwoven branches that make up the head of hair–crown are strongly reminiscent of the one in the Sala delle Asse in Milan.
Summer
1563Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. Spring faces left (as does Autumn) and is depicted in his early youth with a face brimming with flowers, Summer is an adolescent, Autumn is an elderly, bearded figure and Winter is an old man with a straggly, unkempt beard and withered bark-skin. Besides the evident influence of transalpine figurative culture, Arcimboldi appears to demonstrate a profound knowledge of the work of Leonardo, in particular his anatomical studies, the influence of which is clearly evident in Summer.
The Librarian
1566 circaAmongst the works which made Arcimboldi – the“Ingegnosissimo Pittor fantastico” as he was defined by the Lateran canon Gregorio Comanini – most famous were his “composite head” paintings, where the features are made up of elements pertinent to the subject. The Librarian is composed entirely of books, is dressed in a curtain and has an ear consisting of book-binding tape. A portraitist from 1562 onwards at the court of Ferdinand I (1558-1564), Arcimboldi managed nonetheless to combine his skill as a “naturalist” painter, acquired while he was in Lombardy, with a pronounced spirit of invention. With his bizarre, fantastic heads he gave rise to something of a European fashion.
Fire
1566Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. This provides an interpretation for the presence in Fire of the two-headed eagle and the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece, which is made of gun-locks. The latter was an innovation of the Hapsburg period.
The Jurist
1566Amongst the works which made Arcimboldi – the“Ingegnosissimo Pittor fantastico” as he was defined by the Lateran canon Gregorio Comanini – most famous were his “composite head” paintings, where the features are made out of elements pertinent to the subject being depicted. The Jurist, formed by instruments of the trade, is closely related to The Lawyer, which consists entirely of books. A portraitist from 1562 onwards at the court of Ferdinand I (1558-1564), Arcimboldi managed nonetheless to combine his skill as a “naturalist” painter, acquired while he was in Lombardy, with a particularly pronounced spirit of invention. With his bizarre, fantastic heads he gave rise to something of a European fashion.
Water
1568Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. The depiction of the figure in Water is perhaps one of the most complex of all of Arcimboldi’s fantastic composite heads. Over sixty species of fish, reptile and mammal are clearly identifiable. For example, the cheek is recognisably a skate, while the sunfish contributes its eye and the moray eel its nose. The mouth is formed by a shark and the beard by a ling.
Earth
1570Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. This provides an interpretation for the presence in Earth of the Golden Fleece and the lion’s mantle of Hercules, which was a Bohemian symbol. The upper part of the work is made up entirely of animals whose horns form a crown, a further allusion to the Emperor. According to Comanini, each animal in Earth also has a precise meaning in relation to the position it occupies. The elephant, for example, which is a bashful animal, forms the cheek, which is the seat of shame.
Spring
1573Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. Spring faces left (as does Autumn) and is depicted in his early youth with a face brimming with flowers, Summer is an adolescent, Autumn is an elderly, bearded figure and Winter is an old man with a straggly, unkempt beard and withered bark-skin. In Spring there is a prominent iris on the breast, the ear consists of a columbine aquilegia and at the top of the neck there is a lily. All these flowers have a clear symbolic value in transalpine figurative culture, which Arcimboldi seems to have been aware of and taken into consideration.
Autumn
1573Arcimboldi completed two series of the Elements and Seasons for the court in Prague. In the light of the discovery of a series of manuscripts from the painter’s court entourage, these have been interpreted as allegorical celebrations of the kingdom. A poem by the Milanese poet Giovanni Battista Fontana, known as Fonteius, takes as its subject these famous series, which seem to be based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. The various elements assume the human form of the sovereign, present in the profiles of the portraits, and signify the dominion of the Austrian royal family over time and the universe. Spring faces left (as does Autumn) and is depicted in his early youth with a face brimming with flowers, Summer is an adolescent, Autumn is an elderly, bearded figure and Winter is an old man with a straggly, unkempt beard and withered bark-skin.
Rudolf II as Vertumnus
1591The finest expression of his imaginative representation of the Seasons and the Elements can be found in the portrait of Rudolf II in the guise of Vertumnus, god of the seasons. The painting sums up the allegory of Arcimboldo’s first metamorphoses in a single image in which one can see the fruits and flowers of each season. The simultaneous flowering and ripening of the Earth’s fruits allude to the Golden Age of Rudolf’s reign, an allusion to an eternal Spring and the dream of Imperial propaganda. Arcimboldi arrived in Prague in 1562 and served three successive Hapsburg emperors, carrying out a wide variety of tasks and giving life to the distinctive allegorical-celebratory language of the royal house, which was based on a system of correspondences between the microcosm and the macrocosm. There is a literary reference to Vertumnus in a poem by Comanini.
Flora
1591 circaOne of Arcimboldi’s most celebrated and widely-admired composite heads, the first version of Flora, executed in 1589, was described by Lomazzo and Comanini in their works, and it also inspired a panegyrical sonnet by Borgogni. The Roman divinity of Spring is depicted with a mass of white flowers that form the delicate complexion of the face, while the redness of the cheeks is rendered with two pale pink roses.