Guido Reni Biography
(born. 1575, Calvenzano
died. 1642, Bologna)
Guido Reni was an Italian painter of popular religious paintings and critically acclaimed mythological scene paintings. Guido Reni was born in Bologna and began to study painting at the age of nine; he joined the Carracci Academy when he was 20. His studies were rounded off by a trip to Rome in about 1600. From that moment on, antique and recent Roman art became his ideals. Guido Reni admired Raphael unconditionally. He did, however, come to terms with Caravaggio’s naturalism in a group of youthful paintings such as The Crucifixion of St Peter in the Vatican Gallery (1604), where the use of chiaroscuro provided enormous energy.
Guido Reni alternated between living in his native Bologna and visits to Rome. After Annibale Carracci’s death (1609) Guido Reni became the leader of the classical school of Emilian painters. His adhesion to this school can be seen in the fresco paintings Reni painted in Rome in about 1610 in the Quirinal Palace, the Vatican, and various churches (e.g. San Gregorio Magno al Cielo). They were inspired by the return to classical taste and culminated in Aurora in Palazzo Ludovisi which has almost mimetic qualities. The large altarpieces Reni painted in Bologna - The Massacre of the Innocents and Pietà dei Mendicanti both in the Bologna Pinacoteca Nazionale - mark the triumph of design, the ability to control and channel feelings, gestures, expressions, drawing, and colour into a single, eloquent, and faultless form. Guido Reni’s success was underlined by the important commissions he received. They included the cycle of The Labors of Hercules (1617-21) that Reni painted for the Duke of Mantua and which are now in the Louvre. Reni exalted the clarity of light, the perfection of the body, and lively colour. Toward the end of his life, Reni modified his style. Reni paintings became so airy as to seem insubstantial and were almost completely monochrome. Reni also used long, flowing brushstrokes and conveyed an atmosphere laden with intense melancholy.
Guido Reni was a quintessentially classical academic but he was also one of the most elegant painters in the annals of art history. Reni was constantly seeking an absolute, rarefied perfection which he measured against classical Antiquity and Raphael. Because of this, over the years the Bolognese painter has been in and out of fashion, depending on the tastes of the times. The eighteenth century loved Reni, the nineteenth century, persuaded by the violent criticism of John Ruskin, hated Reni. But even his detractors cannot deny the exceptional technical quality of Reni paintings nor the clarity of his supremely assured and harmonious brushwork.