Giovanni Gonnelli


Giovanni Gonnelli, also known as il Cieco da Gambassi was an Italian sculptor of the Baroque period, born in Tuscany. He is one of the biographies featured by Filippo Baldinucci.

Blindness

He became a blind sculptor. According to Baldinucci, he had been discovered in the studio of the elder Pietro Tacca by the duke of Mantua, Carlo Gonzaga. However, following the Duke back to his capital meant that he suffered from the siege of the city by German troops in 1630, during the War of the Mantuan Succession. During this time, and perhaps due to the effects of deprivation and labor, he became completely blind.

Return to Tuscany and travel to Rome

Back in Tuscany, after a spell of melancholy, he began to sculpt again in clay, and his work aroused accolades and patronage from the likes of the Ferdinando II de' Medici, [Grand Duke of Tuscany|Grand Duke of Tuscany, Ferdinand] and Pope Urban VIII. He traveled to Rome to display his work. Baldinucci recounts that one patron forced him to work in a dark room. He lived comfortably, and remained jolly. He had ten children, played guitar and sang, and engaged in various love affairs.