Giovanni Odazzi was born in Rome on 25 March 1663. After a brief and unimportant apprenticeship with the engraver
Cornelis Bloemaert, he entered the workshop of
Ciro Ferri, and after Ferri’s death (1689) became the pupil and assistant of
Giovanni Battista Gaulli. He lived almost entirely in Rome and the
Lazio. His art developed evenly, without abrupt changes of direction, continuing the traditions established by Ferri and Gaulli. Ferri encouraged the development of his natural facility in drawing, enabling him to create harmonious, although sometimes rather elementary, compositions for his many altarpieces. His first independent works are three frescoes, showing
King David, the
Adoration of the Magi and the
Flight into Egypt, above the nave arcade in
Santa Maria in Ara Coeli in Rome. They are magniloquent Late Baroque works that, in their bold and energetic compositions and facial types, continue the traditions of
Pietro da Cortona and Ferri. A little later the altarpiece with
Christ and the Virgin Appearing to St. Nicholas of Bari (Rome,
Santo Stefano del Cacco) reveals that Odazzi had also absorbed the style of Gaulli; indeed, it is directly based on Gaulli’s altarpiece (1697–8) of the same subject, in
Santa Maria Maddalena, Rome. However, he never repudiated his inheritance from Ferri, and the beautiful
Annunciation (c. 1720; Segovia, La Granja) truthfully echoes Ferri’s altarpiece, one of his last works, in the collegiate church of
Valmontone (Province of Rome). Like most of the artists working in Rome between the second half of the 17th century and the first half of the 18th, Odazzi was also inspired by
Maratta. His monumental fresco of
St. Bruno’s Vision of the Virgin (commissioned 1698) was painted for a chapel, designed by Maratta, at the end of the left transept in
Santa Maria degli Angeli e dei Martiri, Rome. Despite working in the shadow of Ferri, Gaulli and Maratti, Odazzi achieved a degree of independence. His
St. Bernard’s Vision of the Crucified Christ and
Virgin and Child with St. Robert of Molesmes and St. Benedict (both ; Rome,
San Bernardo alle Terme) most brilliantly reveal his individual style. Compositionally, they derive from Gaulli and Maratta, although the space is less fluid and vortex-like than in Gaulli, and the expression of sentiment less intense than in Maratta; gestures are softened, and crystallized. Odazzi’s originality is evident above all in the colour, in the use of varied and clear tints, spread out in areas of brightness to create porcelain-like effects, which link the art of the Late Baroque to that of painters such as
Agostino Masucci, who anticipated aspects of
Neoclassicism. There followed the frescoes of the
Fall of the Rebel Angels (c. 1715;
Santi Apostoli, Rome), inspired by Gaulli’s frescoes in the
church of the Gesù, Rome, and frescoes (after 1722) showing
Justice and Peace,
Faith and Hope and Charity and Prudence, in the Palazzo Albani (now del Drago), Rome, commissioned by Cardinal
Annibale Albani. These works, although retaining the Baroque illusionistic device of showing figures bursting through the picture frame, are nonetheless increasingly classicist. In these years Odazzi was a highly successful artist, and the agent of Lothar Franz von Schönborn, Archbishop of Mainz, cited him among the most eminent history painters in Rome, alongside
Sebastiano Conca,
Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari, and
Francesco Trevisani. He was knighted by
Pope Clement XI. Odazzi died in Rome on 6 June 1731. ==Works==