Filippo Negroli

Burgonet by Filippo Negroli (Italian, Milan ca. 1510–1579) Located at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.[1]
Filippo Negroli
Bornc1510
Milan
Died1579 (aged 68–69)
NationalityItalian (Milanese)
OccupationEngineer
ParentFather Gian Giacomo Negroli (ca. 1463-1543)
Engineering career
DisciplineArmourer
Practice nameMetalworker

Filippo Negroli (ca. 1510–1579) was an armourer from Milan. He was renowned as being extremely skilled, and may be considered the most famous armourer of all time. Working together with his younger brothers Giovan Battista (ca. 1511–1591) and Francesco (ca. 1522–1600) in the Negroli family workshop headed by their father Gian Giacomo Negroli (ca. 1463–1543), Filippo was specialized in repoussé of armour, whereas his brother Francesco was renowned for his damascening skills. Filippo's pieces are considered especially remarkable because they were wrought in steel, rather than the more-easily worked iron that was the traditionally assumed medium.

He made parade armour for several esteemed clients, including Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Guidobaldo II della Rovere.

Examples of his work include:

References

  1. ^ "Filippo Negroli | Burgonet | Italian, Milan".
  2. ^ Pyhrr, catalogue no. 35
  3. ^ Pyhrr, catalogue no. 33
  4. ^ Pyhrr, catalogue no. 39
  • Famous Makers and European Centers of Arms and Armor Production. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • Fred Stern. Did Napoleon wear armor?, artnet.com - magazine.
  • Alan R. Williams. The Steel of the Negroli. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • Stuart W. Pyhrr and Jose-A. Godoy (1988),Heroic Armor of the Italian Renaissance: Filippo Negroli and his Contemporaries. The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Further reading

  • Ortiz, A.; Carretero, C.; et al. (1991). Resplendence of the Spanish monarchy : Renaissance tapestries and armor from the Patrimonio Nacional. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. (see index)


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