Innocenzo Spinazzi


Innocenzo Spinazzi was an Italian sculptor of the Rococo period active in Rome and Florence.

Biography

Born in Rome the son of a silversmith, he became the leading sculptor in Florence, where he died. He was trained by Giovanni Battista Maini. In Rome, he completed the statue of St Joseph Calasanctius for the nave of St Peter's Basilica.
He arrived in Florence in 1769, and the next year was named official court sculptor in 1770. Grand Duke Leopold first employed him to restore antique sculpture. He completed a portrait bust of Grand Duke Leopoldo. Spinazzi contributed monuments to three celebrated Florentines for the church of Santa Croce: jurist Giovanni Lami ; Angelo Tavanti ; and author Niccolò Machiavelli. In 1792 he added an angel to the Baptism by Andrea Sansovino and Vincenzo Danti above the Porta del Paradiso of the Baptistery of Florence. His virtuoso marble figures of heavily veiled women, for example Faith and Religion, follow precedents set by Antonio Corradini in Naples. Spinazzi was professor of sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts, Florence, from 1784. One of pupils was Francesco Carradori. He died at Florence in 1798.