Leonardo Sormani
Leonardo Sormani was an Italian sculptor active in Rome during the Renaissance. Details of his life are not well known, and authors seemingly refer to him by different names: Giorgio Vasari spoke of a Lionardo Milanese; Giovanni Baglione wrote biographical details of a Lionardo da Serzana or Sarzana; while by the 1670s Giovanni Vincenzo Verzellino and Raffaele Soprani tried to distinguish Vasari's Lionardo from a Leonardo Sormani, originally from Savona. These names, however, appear to refer to the same sculptor. Attributions however of individual works are difficult.
Sarzana appears to have been a restorer as well as a sculptor. Works attributed to Sarzana include:
- Seated statue of Pope Pius V made for the Papal tomb at the Sistine Chapel at Santa Maria Maggiore, commissioned by Cardinal Peretti, soon to be Sixtus V
- Bust of Cardinal Rodolfo Pio da Carpi in the Church of Santa Trinità dei Monti, Rome
- Saints Peter and Paul for the chapel of Cardinal Giovanni Ricci of Montepulciano in San Pietro in Montorio.
- Contributions to statues in the tomb of Pope Nicholas IV in Santa Maria Maggiore
- Contributions to the statue of Moses for the Fountain of Acqua Felice in Rome
- Statue of enthroned Pope [Paul III] Farnese