della
Robbia
Italian family of sculptors and potters.
They were active in
Florence from the early 15th century and elsewhere in Italy and
France well into the 16th. Family members were traditionally
employed in the textile industry, and their name derives from
rubia tinctorum, a red dye. Luca della Robbia founded
the family sculpture workshop in Florence and was regarded by
contemporaries as a leading artistic innovator, comparable to
Donatello and Masaccio. The influence of antique art and his
characteristic liveliness and charm are evident in such works as
the marble singing-gallery for Florence Cathedral. He is
credited with the invention of the tin-glazed terracotta
sculpture for which the family became well known. His nephew Andrea della Robbia, who inherited the workshop, tended to use
more complex compositions and polychrome glazing rather than the
simple blue-and-white schemes favoured by his uncle. Several of
Andrea’s sons worked in the shop. Marco della Robbia (b 6
April 1468; d 1529–34), perhaps the least talented of the
sons, became a Dominican monk in 1496 but continued to execute
sculpture, e.g. the lunette of the Annunciation (1510–15;
Lucca, S Frediano). Andrea’s sons Giovanni della Robbia and
Luca della Robbia the younger (b 25 Aug 1475; d
before 6 Nov 1548) inherited the workshop and were responsible
for adapting its production to 16th-century taste, influenced by
contemporary Florentine painting. Another son, Francesco della
Robbia (b 23 July 1477; d 1527–8) joined the
Dominican convent of S Marco in Florence in 1495 but maintained
links with the family shop. His work included plastic groups
such as the Nativity of Santo Spirito in Siena (1504),
and terracotta altarpieces, some executed in collaboration with
his brother Marco. In the 1520s Marco and Francesco spent some
time in the Marches, near Macerata, where they realized numerous
glazed terracotta works. Girolamo della Robbia was the only
son of Andrea to continue the reputation of the family’s
terracotta works beyond the mid-16th century. He spent much of
his life in France, working for the royal court, often in
collaboration with Luca the younger, who joined him there in
1529.