Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli

Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli (c. 1500–1569) was an Italian painter of the Parmesan school of Painting, active in the Mannerist style.

Bedoli was born in Parma in a family coming from Viadana. He was a near contemporary of Parmigianino, and after the early death of the latter master, he completed some frescoes initially commissioned to Parmigianino, for example in the apse of Santa Maria della Steccata. He is known to have worked in the studio of the latter's uncles in the city of Parma. He married the daughter of Pier Ilaro Mazzola, a cousin of Parmigianino, hence he added to his name the better known Mazzola appellation.

He painted along with his father in law the Immaculate Conception for the Oratorio della Concezione (now in Parma Gallery). Freedberg describes him in his masterpiece of the Annunciation as resembling Parmigianino in the same way Bronzino reflected the elder Pontormo, equal in skill and refinement, but lacking the original abstracting poetry of the image. The works are equal in polish, but stony in feeling. He produced murals, portraits, designed tombs, and altarpieces — the diverse uses probably trained him best as a decorative artist. His son, Alessandro Mazzola (1533–1608), was an undistinguished painter.

Read more about Girolamo Mazzola Bedoli:  Selected Works