Lorenzo di Credi, born Lorenzo d'Andrea d'Oerigo, …

Years: 1490 - 1490

Lorenzo di Credi, born Lorenzo d'Andrea d'Oerigo, had developed a meticulous technique as a painter, sculptor, and goldsmith under the tutelage of Andrea del Verrocchio.

Unlike his contemporaries in Verrocchio's studio, Leonardo da Vinci and Perugino, Credi was resistant to the stylistic innovations of the High Renaissance.

Handpicked as his late teacher's successor, Credi becomes in 1488 the director of the most flourishing artistic workshop in Florence.

For Pistoia Cathedral he completes the painting of the Madonna Enthroned between John the Baptist and St. Donatus which had been partially painted by his master, Verrocchio, but was left unfinished when Verrocchio went to Venice.

Although Credi’s numerous images of seated Madonnas with attendant angels reveal an artistic personality of scant imagination and often monotonous repetitiveness, his consistently fine draftsmanship is evident in his “Self-Portrait,” painted in about 1490.

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