Bartolomeo Guidobono
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Bartolomeo Guidobono (1654 - 1709) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, active mainly in Northern Italy.
He is also known as il Prete di Savona or Prete Bartolomeo da Savona. He appears to have modeled his style to Northern influences such as Gaudenzio Ferrari and Corregio. He began as a painter of ceramic earthenware with his father, who worked for the royal court of Savoy. He afterwards went to work as a copyist to Parma, Venice, and Genoa. He was admired for his decoration of ornamental parts, such as flowers, fruits, and animals. He helped fresco the Palazzo Centurioni in Genoa. He painted an Inebriation of Lot and in three other subjects for the palace Brignole Sale. His brother Domenico (1670-1746) helped paint the Duomo of Turin with a glory of angels.
[edit] References
- Lanzi, Luigi (1847). in Thomas Roscoe (translator): History of Painting in Italy;From the Period of the Revival of the Fine Arts to the End of the Eighteenth Century (Volume III). London; Original from Oxford University, Digitized January, 2007: Henry G. Bohn, pages 281-282.