Guido Cagnacci

Guido Cagnacci (Italian) - David with the Head of Goliath

Guido Cagnacci (January 19, 1601 1663) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, who produced many works characterized by their use of chiaroscuro and their sensual subjects. He was influenced by the masters of the Bolognese School.

Biography

The Death of Cleopatra, 1658.

Born in Santarcangelo di Romagna near Rimini, he died in Vienna in 1663. He worked in Rimini from 1627 to 1642. After that, he was in Forlì, where absorbed the lesson of the Melozzo's painting.[1]

Prior to that he had been in Rome, in contact with Guercino, Guido Reni and Simon Vouet. He may have had an apprenticeship with the elderly Ludovico Carracci. His initial output includes many devotional subjects. But moving to Venice under the name of Guico Baldo Canlassi da Bologna, he renewed a friendship with Nicolas Regnier, and dedicated himself to private salon paintings, often depicting sensuous naked women from thigh upwards, including Lucretia, Cleopatra, and Mary Magdalene.[2] This allies him to a strand of courtly painting, epitomized in Florence by Francesco Furini, Simone Pignoni and others. In 1650, he moved to Venice. In 1658, he traveled to Vienna, where he remained under patronage of the emperor Leopold I.[3]

His life was at times tempestuous, as characterized by his failed elopement (1628) with an aristocratic widow. Some contemporaries remark him as eccentric, unreliable and of doubtful morality. He is said to have enjoyed the company of cross-dressing models.[2]

Cagnacci's work was, in one view, "entirely unappreciated by his contemporaries," but reassessed by modern critics; his painting is "warm with the heightened tones of grazing light, rich in the play of shadows and colors."[4]

Selected works

Reclining male nude

Gallery

References

  1. "Guido Cagnacci". www.analesiie.unam.mx.
  2. 1 2 Vertova, Luisa (1993). "Guido Cagnacci. Rimini". The Burlington Magazine. Vol. 135 no. 1088: Nov. (The Burlington Magazine Publications, Ltd.). p. 784. JSTOR 885843.
  3. Smyth, Francis P., and John P. O'Neill, ed. (1986). The Age of Correggio and the Carracci: Emilian Painting of the 16th and 17th Centuries. Washington: National Gallery of Art. pp. 392–397. ISBN 0-521-34019-5.
  4. Fossi, Gloria; Marco Bussagli; Mattia Reiche (2004). Italian Art: From the Origins to the Present Day. Catherine Frost (transl.). Florence: Giunti. p. 368. ISBN 88-09-03725-1. OCLC 44745666.

|

External links

Media related to Guido Cagnacci at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.