The article examines the impact of the 1630 plague epidemic in Milan, an event that profoundly shaped the city’s history and was poetically depicted by Alessan- dro Manzoni. While much research has focused on the social and historical consequences, less attention has been given to the rise of a new generation of artists during this time.These artists, trained under Giovanni Battista Crespi il Cerano (1573-1632) and the Accade- mia Ambrosiana, experienced the epidemic firsthand. They guarded the city gates and witnessed the deaths of their mentors, friends, and fellow students while continuing to create paintings and engravings. These surviving artists like Melchiorre Gherardini, Gerolamo Chignoli, Carlo Biffi, and Ercole Procaccini the Youn- ger carried forward the legacy of the Borromean mas- ters while staying true to their tradition and their work influenced Milanese art for the next two decades. By analyzing key artworks from this period, this stu- dy explores the connection between painters and the plague – both as witnesses and as creators of repre- sentations of the crisis – challenging the traditional view of the epidemic as merely destructive, instead presenting it as a catalyst for artistic renewal and transformation in Milan’s art history.
Ferrari, E., In my End is my Beginning. Painters in Milan after the Plague of 1630, <<KUNSTTEXTE.DE>>, 2025; (2): 24-34. [doi:https://doi.org/10.48633/ksttx.2025.2.110589] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/322356]
In my End is my Beginning. Painters in Milan after the Plague of 1630
Ferrari, Emma
Primo
2024
Abstract
The article examines the impact of the 1630 plague epidemic in Milan, an event that profoundly shaped the city’s history and was poetically depicted by Alessan- dro Manzoni. While much research has focused on the social and historical consequences, less attention has been given to the rise of a new generation of artists during this time.These artists, trained under Giovanni Battista Crespi il Cerano (1573-1632) and the Accade- mia Ambrosiana, experienced the epidemic firsthand. They guarded the city gates and witnessed the deaths of their mentors, friends, and fellow students while continuing to create paintings and engravings. These surviving artists like Melchiorre Gherardini, Gerolamo Chignoli, Carlo Biffi, and Ercole Procaccini the Youn- ger carried forward the legacy of the Borromean mas- ters while staying true to their tradition and their work influenced Milanese art for the next two decades. By analyzing key artworks from this period, this stu- dy explores the connection between painters and the plague – both as witnesses and as creators of repre- sentations of the crisis – challenging the traditional view of the epidemic as merely destructive, instead presenting it as a catalyst for artistic renewal and transformation in Milan’s art history.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



