The Flamboyant Gothic style, as the last …

Years: 1540 - 1540
November

The Flamboyant Gothic style, as the last major period of Gothic art and architecture comes to be called, has finally been superseded by the Mannerist style, which had originated in Rome but had quickly spread, in the work of Giulio Romano and Perino De Vaga, throughout Italy.

Il Rosso Fiorentino, who had left Rome in 1530 to work at the Chateau de Fontainebleau, had carried the style to France, and together with his Bolognese assistant, Francesco Primaticcio, has introduced Mannerist idioms to France and Northern Europe through the paintings, frescoes, and ornamental stuccowork they have created.

Because works by all these artists are disseminated through engravings, Mannerism becomes a European phenomenon by 1540.

Rosso dies by his own hand (according to according to an unsubstantiated claim by Giorgio Vasari, his biographer) at forty-five on November 14, 1540.

Primaticcio, an architect, decorator, painter, and stuccoist who had studied under Gulio Romano, takes control of the artistic direction at Fontainebleau, furnishing the painters and stuccators of his team, such as Niccolò dell'Abbate, with designs.

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