Rodolfo Pallucchini


Rodolfo Pallucchini was an Italian art historian, professor, administrator, curator and patron. Pallucchini was the son of an engineer who moved with his family to Venice in 1925. In nearby Padua, Pallucchini followed his university studies, graduating in literature in 1931 under the guidance of Giuseppe Fiocco with a thesis, published three years later, focused on the figure of Giovanni Battista Piazzetta.

Career

In 1935, Pallucchini was appointed inspector at the Estense Gallery in Modena, and became its director in 1939. His academic career began in 1937, and he later held the chair of History of Medieval and Modern Art in various Italian universities: Bologna, Venice and Padua.
Pallucchini curated the exhibition Five centuries of Venetian painting set up in 1945 at the Procuratie Nuove in Venice, considered a model for subsequent "regional reconnaissance" exhibitions organized throughout Italy. In 1947, Pallucchini founded the magazine Arte Veneta of which he also took over the direction. Pallucchini published numerous studies collected in books and magazines, even after ceasing his academic activity in 1979. Among his colleagues and friends were the art historians Giulio Carlo Argan, Lionello Venturi and Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti. Pallucchini is noted for putting forth and emphasizing of the theory that Giambattista Pittoni studied under Antonio Balestra that has now generally been discounted in the classical arts historical circles.

Death

Pallucchini died on April 8, 1989, in Venice, Italy. His library and personal archive were donated to the University of Udine by his heirs, his daughters Vittoria and Teresa: the library in 1989 and personal archive in 2001. The material is preserved in the Special Collections Section of the university's Humanities Library.

Administrative positions

Select bibliography

Venetian painting of the sixteenth century The Youth of Tintoretto Piazzetta Giovanni Bellini Venetian painting of the 18th century
  • ''Venetian painting of the 17th century''