Bernardo di Matteo Gamberelli (Settignano near Florence 1409 –
Florence, 1464), better known as Bernardo Rossellino, was a Florentine
sculptor and architect, the elder brother of the painter Antonio
Rossellino.
As a young man Rossellino was the pupil and collaborator of Leone Battista
Alberti, from whose sketches and plans he constructed the Palazzo Rucellai,
Florence, one of the very first fully Renaissance palazzi. It bears three
orders on flat pilasters inscribed on a surface of delicate and varied
rustication, beeneath a corbelled cornice without a frieze.At Arezzo he
applied a façade all'antica to the late Gothic structure of the
charitable confraternity, the Fraternità della Misericordia.
Rossellino was active in Tuscany and Rome, where he worked a lot for Pope
Nicholas V, enlarging the transept and apse of the old St Peter's Basilica
(1452–55) that was swept away in the following generation. Among lesser
projects carried out in Rome for Nicholas was restoration at the church of
Santo Stefano, c. 1450, where Rossellino's altar may still be seen.
Rosselino became famous most of all for the idealized replanning of Pienza,
the ancient district of Corsignano, where Pope Pius II wanted to make a
monument of his natal place, designed according to the principles of the
Renaissance urbanistics and architecture. He made the center with the
square and main constructions, the Duomo, Palazzo Pubblico, bishop's
palace (Palazzo Vescovile, and the Palazzo Piccolomini, which were to be
surrounded by the rest of the little city. In the Palazzo Piccolomini,
Pienza, Rossellino took up again the façade organization of Palazzo
Rucellai [1]. For Pius Rossellino also designed the Sienese palazzi of the
Nerucci and the beautiful Palazzo Piccolomini.
In architecture he innovated the mural funeral monument, with the wall
tomb of Leonardo Bruni in Santa Croce in Florence, (1444 – 1447) [2],
undocumented but immediately famous. In it he depicted the late Florentine
chancellor lying in repose on a sarcophagus, in a shallow reveal within
the thickness of the wall, set within an arched entablature supported on
pilasters, recalling the central opening of a triumphal arch, with a
relief of the Madonna in the tympanum. This type of tomb was taken up by
other artists, first of all by Rossellino's townsman Desiderio da
Settignano. Among other sculptural commissions in architectural formats,
Bernardo designed the tomb of La Beata Villana in the Church of Santa
Maria Novella, Florence, and that of the jurist, Filippo Lazzari, in the
Church of San Domenico at Pistoia. He provided a richly ornamented marble
doorway for the Palazzo Publico at Siena, and a terracotta panel
representing the Annunciation is in the cathedral at Arezzo.
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It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "Italian Renaissance".