Lanfranco, Giovanni (1582–1647). Italian painter, who with
Guercino and
Pietro da Cortona ranks as one of the founders of the High
Baroque style of painting. He was born in Parma, where he trained under
Agostino Carracci before going to Rome in 1602 to assist Annibale Carracci in the Palazzo Farnese. After Annibale's death in 1609, he returned for a while to Emilia, but by about 1612 was back in Rome, where he gradually superseded his arch-rival
Domenichino as the leading fresco decorator in the city. Their work can be compared in the church of S. Andrea della Valle; Domenichino painted the apse and the pendentives of the dome, but Lanfranco was awarded the commission for the
Assumption of the Virgin (1625–7) in the dome itself. This fresco is one of the key works of Baroque art and it ended the dominance of Bolognese classicism in Rome. The heroic figure style derives from the Carracci, but the
illusionistic foreshortening is based on
Correggio's dome paintings in Lanfranco's native Parma, here carried to new extremes.
Bellori compared the way in which Lanfranco handles the multitude of figures to the harmonious blending of voices in a choir, and the dynamic design became a pattern for illusionistic decorators throughout Europe. Between 1634 and 1646 Lanfranco was based in Naples, where he produced numerous frescos in the cathedral and other major churches. His work was an inspiration to such Neapolitan masters as
Mattia Preti,
Luca Giordano, and
Solimena. He returned to Rome in 1646, the year before his death; his final (unfinished) work, a fresco of
S. Carlo Borromeo in Glory in the apse of S. Carlo ai Catinari, exemplifies the airy luminosity of his final style. Lanfranco is much less renowned as an easel painter, but he created some outstanding works in this field also. Particularly remarkable are his
Ecstasy of the Blessed Margaret of Cortona (1622, Pitti, Florence), which possibly influenced
Bernini's St Teresa, and
St Mary Magdalen Transported to Heaven (
c.1605, Mus. di Capodimonte, Naples), a bizarre and highly original work in which the rapturous saint is carried by angels above a poetically evoked view of the Roman Campagna.