In the spring of 1539, after a sojourn of more than seven years in Rome, Francesco Salviati made a journey to North Italy that was of considerable importance for his subsequent development.1 The facts of the journey are known or can be deduced in some detail. Immediately before leaving Rome, Francesco had been engaged on the decoration of the Oratory of San Giovanni Decollate He completed his Visitation there in 1538, and was probably preparing a project for the Birth of the Baptist in an adjacent space when a rivalry with Jacopino del Conte, another of the young painters working in the Oratory, caused him to withdraw from the program of decoration.2 According to Vasari, Francesco returned to Florence to visit his family at this point, but he was undoubtedly also tempted by the possibility of employment at the recently established court of Cosimo I de’ Medici. He was, in fact, promptly engaged to participate in the decorations for Cosimo's forthcoming marriage to Eleonora da Toledo, but this work did not hold his interest for long. Perhaps Bronzino seemed too formidable a rival for Medici patronage: Salviati never worked well in the face of competition. In any event, around the end of June he appeared in Bologna, having left Carlo Portelli to complete his Coronation of Cosimo for the wedding festivities. He spent a few days with Vasari, who has just returned to Bologna from Camaldoli to undertake a commission at San Michele in Bosco.3 Friends attempted to obtain a commission for Salviati to paint an altarpiece for the Ospedale della Morte, but they were not successful; and after leaving drawings to be engraved by Girolamo Fagiuoli, Salviati continued his journey. Voss has postulated a visit to Parma at this point because of the increase of Parmigianino influence in Salviati's north Italian works.4 Such a visit was not essential for an acquaintance with Parmigianino's style, which Salviati had surely already known from paintings, drawings, and prints in Rome and Bologna;5 but it is quite possible that he stopped for a day or two before proceeding to Venice, where his presence seems implied by Pietro Aretino in a letter to Leone Leoni of July 11.6
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