Piero Di Cosimo
Related Category: European Art to 1599: Biographies
(pyĕ´rō dē kô´zēmō), 14621521, Florentine painter, whose name was Piero di Lorenzo. He adopted the name of his master, Cosimo Rosselli, whom he accompanied to Rome in 1482 and assisted in the decorating of the Sistine Chapel. His religious works have charm, but more important are his animated mythological scenes. Commissioned by the Florentine Francesco Pugliese, he painted many works depicting the life of primitive man. Among these pictures are the
Hunting Scene and the
Return from the Hunt (both: Metropolitan Mus.);
Discovery of Honey (Worcester Mus.);
Discovery of Wine (Fogg Mus., Cambridge); and
Vulcan and Aeolus (National Art Gall. of Canada, Ottawa). Other well-known works by Piero are the
Death of Procris (National Gall., London) and
Simonetta Vespucci (Chantilly). The influence of Leonardo da Vinci is evident in some of his work, including the
Portrait of a Woman with a Rabbit (Yale Univ.).
See biography by R. L. Douglas (1946); S. J. Freedberg, Painting of the High Renaissance (1961).