Giuseppe Bezzuoli
Giuseppe Bezzuoli (28 November 1784 – 13 September 1855) was an Italian painter of the Neoclassic period, active in Milan, Rome, and his native city of Florence.
Biography
He was a candidate to the professorship of painting at the Florence Academy after Pietro Benvenuti's death. He studied as a young man under Des Marais at Florence and afterward spent some time at Rome between 1813 and 1820. His large picture in the Academy include the The Entry of Charles VIII into Florence (1822–1829), production. Some of his smaller works, such as The Galatea and the small copy of Raphael's School of Athens (1819), in the Galleria Tosio Martinengo at Brescia, give a more favorable idea of his talent. He painted one of the lunettes in the Tribune of Galileo at the Natural History Museum (La Specola Museum) in Florence, and the more important series of scenes from the life of Caesar (1836) in one of the rooms on the ground floor of the Pitti Palace. His Assumption of the Virgin is found in the Museo dell'Opera of the church of Santa Croce.
Other principal works include a Baptism of Clovis and a Madonna in fresco for the Pitti Palace. He painted two ceilings for the Borghese Palace at Rome representing Toilet of Venus, and Venus carrying Ascanius. He died in Florence.
Among his pupils at the Academy were Giovanni Fattori, Giuseppe Raggio, Enrico Pollastrini, Carlo Ademollo, Giuseppe Pierotti, Stefano Ussi, and Silvestro Lega.
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Entry of Charles VIII into Florence (1829)
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Galileo demonstrates laws of gravity -
Assumption -
Maria Antonia Bourbon of Two Sicilies (1847)
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Maria Antonia Bourbon of Two Sicilies
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Grand Duke Leopold II of Tuscany
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Julius von Haynau (1853)
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Pius VII, portrait by Morghen, engraved by Bezzuoli
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References
- Bryan, Michael (1886). Robert Edmund Graves, ed. Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical (Volume I: A-K). York St. #4, Covent Garden, London; Original from Fogg Library, Digitized May 18, 2007: George Bell and Sons. pp. page 123.
- Rollins Willard, Ashton (1900). History of Modern Italian Art. Longmans, Green & co., 39 Paternoster Row, London; Digitized by Googlebooks. pp. 282–3.
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