, Museum of Fine Arts of Seville. With a monopoly on Spanish trade with the
West Indies, Seville saw a great influx of wealth. This wealth drew
Italian artists such as
Pietro Torrigiano, classmate rival of
Michelangelo in the garden of the
Medici. Torrigiano executed magnificent sculptures at the monastery of Saint Jerome and elsewhere in Seville, as well as important tombs and other works, which brought the influence of the
Italian Renaissance and of
humanism to Seville. French and
Flemish sculptors such as
Roque Balduque arrived as well, bringing with them a tradition of a greater realism. The classicist tradition from Italy with its ideals of beauty and the northern tradition with a greater emphasis on expression combined to create the atmosphere of sculpture in Seville in the first two thirds of the 16th century. To these would later be added the
mannerism characteristic of the era.
Isidro de Villoldo, who had collaborated with
Alonso Berruguete to produce the choir stalls of the
Cathedral of Toledo, and who had also done important work in
Castile, arrived to sculpt the main altarpiece of the charterhouse of the
Monastery of Santa Maria de las Cuevas. However, he died suddenly, leaving the project unfinished. The distinguished
Salamancan sculptor
Juan Bautista Vázquez the Elder continued the project, aided by several others including his son
Juan Bautista Vázquez the Younger, his brother-in-law the wood sculptor
Juan de Oviedo the Elder,
Jerónimo Hernández,
Miguel de Adán,
Gaspar del Águila, and
Gaspar Núñez Delgado. Prior to this massive influx of sculptors captained by the elder Vázquez, Seville had, perhaps, primarily drawn in sculptors and influences from elsewhere. From this point, there is an unquestionable continuous tradition of sculpture specific to Seville. Furthermore, the younger Vázquez would go on to create the main altarpiece of the
Monastery of Saint Jerome in
Granada, where he would establish a distinct
Granadan school of sculpture. == Martínez Montañés ==