Egidio De Maulo
Egidio De Maulo (Giulianova, Italy; 4 September 1840 - Rome, Italy, 1904) was an Italian painter mainly of landscapes and still lifes.
Biography
A young Egidio moved to Naples where he successfully painted landscapes and still lifes among the painters who were part of the School of Posillipo. He was a disciple of the Neapolitan painter Consalvo Carelli, father-in-law of Vincenzo Bindi, the patron who donated his collection of paintings that now make a part of the Gallery Giuliese at the Museo D'arte dello Splendore in Giulianova, Italy. While in Naples, Egidio exhibited a group of still lifes: A group of game, A hare and A duck. In 1893 his entry in the International Exhibition at the Principality of Monaco received the Bronze Medal. The Pinacoteca Civica of Teramo, Italy contains a painting Cacciagione (Still life of Game). His Madonna and Child is found in the chapel of Bartolomei in the church of San Gaetano in Giulianova.[1]
See also
- V-Bibliography Bindi - "Artists Abruzzo" -Ed de Angelis
- Giuliano Commune Website
- ↑ Italian Wikipedia entry
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Cacciagione
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Beccaccia