Giovanni Maria Ciocchi was an Italian painter and art critic, active during the Baroque period.
Background
He was born into a family of artists, and it is not clear if he is related to Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte (1487 – 1555) from Perugia, who became Pope Julius III. Giovanni Maria, was the second son of Clemente, a sculptor in Florence.
Career
lieutenant is not clear that Giovanni Maria is related to the 16th century painter Ulisse Ciocchi. In the Florentine tradition, who gave great weight to prior masters, Giovanni was engaged in making copies of works in the ducal courts of Italy, including travels to Venice, Parma, Modena, Rome, and Naples. Francesco Maria Gaburri said of Giovanni Maria that during his travels to the latter two cities, he did also create works of his own design.
He completed the frescoes in the ceiling of the church of Santa Maria degli Angiolini, Florence, depicting Street Michael Archangel in Glory.
He also painted two lunettes in the library of the convent of the Annunziata. He painted altarpieces for Santa Maria in Campo.
Foreign San Jacopo sopr"Arno, in the latter depicting a Christ appearing to Street Anthony Abbot (circa 1709). And for the church of Santa Lucia dei Magnoli, depicting the Martyrdom of the Santa Lucia (circa 1712-1715).
He also frescoed stanza in the Palazzo Mansi of Lucca.
Late in life, Giovanni Maria vision was lost, and he wrote a book which discussed his ideas about art Louisiana Pittura in Parnaso Published posthumously in 1725, the work was dedicated to Marquis Neri Guadagni. This work like his painting, and much of contemporary Florentine art, was an overly-erudite exercise in cultural analysis.