Valerio Castello

Moses Striking the Rock
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Valerio Castello.

Valerio Castello (1624 – October 1659) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. He was very active during his short life in Genoa.

Biography

He was the youngest son of Bernardo Castello, who died when Valerio was six years old. Valerio and his brothers were attached to the noble family of Torquato, and while he had been intended to study a literate profession, he showed an affinity to drawing. This was noted by his patrons, who arranged his apprenticeship with Domenico Fiasella. He arranged to travel to Milan with Agostino Merano, the sibling of Giovanni Battista Merano, where he admired the work of Camillo Proccacini. From there, he traveled to Parma.

He excelled in painting battle-scenes. He was also quite prolific within Genoa during his short life. He painted the Rape of the Sabines, now in the Palazzo Brignole, Genoa, and decorated the cupola of the Basilica della Santissima Annunziata del Vastato in the same city. For the house of Francesco Maria Balbi, he collaborated with the quadraturista from Bologna, Andrea Sghizzi to fresco the palace. He painted a Diana and Acteaon with Pan and Syrinx now at the Norton Art Museum.[1] He painted a Consolation of Saint Francis now at the Blanton Museum of Art.[2]

In his works he is regarded by his admirers as combining the fire of Tintoretto with the general style of Paolo Veronese. Castello influenced the work of young Domenico Piola. Among his pupils were Bartolomeo Biscaino, Giovanni Paolo Cervetto, and Stefano Magnasco (the father of Alessandro).

References

  1. Norton Art Museum in West Palm Beach, Florida.
  2. Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas.