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Johann Christoph Storer

Johann Christoph Storer (Konstanz, 20 July 1611Konstanz, 15 January 1671) was a German Baroque painter, draughtsman and etcher.

Biography

The apprentice of his father, Bartholomäus Storer (1586–1635), and then in Italy the pupil of Ercole Procaccini the Younger, he acquired 'a steady hand in drawing' and a 'good manner in oils and on wet lime'. He painted frescoes (1640–45) at the Palazzo Terzi in Bergamo and worked on the decorations for the burial of Queen Elisabeth of Spain in Milan Cathedral. In his finest work, ceiling paintings (1653–7) in the San Sisto chapel of San Lorenzo, Milan, his use of colour anticipated the High Baroque. From 1657 he lived in Konstanz; commissions for altarpieces (e.g. the signed Flagellation, Felde, near Friedburg, St. Afra) took him to Augsburg, Munich and other cities and made him indisputably a church painter, although he retained the freely developed decorative style he had assimilated in Northern Italy. His drawings are characterized by light strokes and the 'sudden introduction of diagonal hatching, isolated patches of shading'. Outstanding among them is the square pen drawing of the Meeting of Peter and Paul on the Way to the Place of Execution (Kunstsammlungen & Museen Augsburg). His designs for works in silver demonstrate an affinity with painted decoration, as in busts of St. Peter and St. Paul (designs, 1664; busts, Konstanz Minster).

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