Italian painter. His birth name was Gian Giacomo de' Alladio and was nicknamed 'Macrino' probably because of his slim and gaunt build. He was also known as Gian Giacomo de Fava. He was a descendant of a family with some social status in Alba. He was active mainly in Piedmont, and is known for his altarpieces and portraits. Nothing is known about his artistic training. It is believed he was in Rome around 1490. Even so, the actual formation of Macrino was obtained from his study of Tuscan and Umbrian masters such as Luca Signorelli and Perugino who worked at the papal seat. Macrino was an eminently eclectic painter and an extraordinary assimilator of aesthetic trends that had developed in Rome and Tuscany and had given birth to the Italian Renaissance. His work shows in particular a stylistic affinity with that of Pinturicchio, which has given rise to the hypothesis that Macrino frequented his workshop. There he must have learned the use of bright colours and the placing of his scenes among bold Renaissance architecture and landscapes rich in Roman ruins and "antiques". Also on the technical plan the use of hatching with a very lean tempera layer under a detailed design made by brush was probably learned from Pinturicchio. He painted the Resurrection for the chapel of Sant'Ugone at the Certosa di Pavia. He also painted in the church of San Francesco at Alba and works in the Vigevano Cathedral. He achieved an artistic high-point in the altarpiece of the Virgin Enthroned between Sts John the Baptist and James, a Bishop Saint and St Jerome (1503, Casale Monferrato, Santuario Crea). The composition is sober and dignified, full of light and colour. //
Category | Artists |
Artists by letter | M |
Artist nationality | Italian |