Giovanni da Nola
Italian (Neapolitan), 1478-1559
He was born the son of a leather merchant, in Nola near Naples.
Da Nola moved to Naples where he trained under Aniello del Fiore and Benedetto da Maiano. In his youth, he traveled to Rome where he was influenced by Michelangelo, and then returned to Naples where he spent the rest of his career as sculptor and architect.
As an architect he built a number of palaces in Naples, including the Palazzo Giusso, now the home of the Naples Eastern University.
Many of the statues he created in Naples were removed to Spain by the viceroys then in charge of the Kingdom of Naples on behalf of the Spanish crown. When the viceroy Ramón de Cardona died in Naples in 1522, da Nola built his tomb in Naples, but it was then transported piece by piece to Bellpuig where da Cardona was buried. It remains one of the main examples of Italian renaissance art in Catalonia.
Most of his works that remain in Naples are in the churches of the city
Person TypeIndividual
Italian (Umbrian), c. 1370-1427
Italian (Roman), 1720-1778
Italian (Venetian), c. 1460-c. 1526
Po-Woh-Geh-Owingeh (San Ildefonso Pueblo), 1884-1943