Luciano Borzone

Herminia and Vafrino Find the Wounded Tancred (1635-45), by Luciano Borzone. Museu Nacional de Belas Artes, Rio de Janeiro.

Luciano Borzone (1590 12 July 1645) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period (although painting in a slightly more antique style), active mainly in his natal city of Genoa.

After an apprenticeship with Filippo Bertolotto, his uncle, he was guided by the Duke of Massa Alberigo to be a pupil of Carlo Corte. He was a prominent portrait painter. In Genoa, he painted the Presentation in the Temple for the church of San Domenico, and the Baptism of Christ for the church of Santo Spirito. Supposedly died from a fall from scaffolding while painting a picture of a Nativity for ceiling of the Nunziata del Vastato.[1] His three sons, Giovanni Battista and Carlo (both who died of the plague in 1657), and Maria Francesco (1625–1679) were also painters. Additional disciples were Giovanni Battista Mainero, Giovanni Battista Monti, Gioacchino Assereto, and Silvestro Chiesa.

He etched some plates from his own compositions: Portrait of Giustiniani; St. Peter delivered from Prison; Prometheus devoured by the Vulture; Children playing; and a set of devout subiects. Maria Francesco, the third son, excelled in painting landscapes and sea-pieces in the style of Lorrain and Pouissin, and came to be employed at the court of Louis XIV. He was born in 1625, and died in 1679.

References

  1. R. Soprani p. 252.

Camillo Manzitti, "Riscoperta di Luciano Borzone, in "Commentari", n. 3, Luglio-Settembre 1969. Camillo Manzitti, "Influenze caravaggesche a Genova e nuovi ritrovamenti su Luciano Borzone", in "Paragone", n. 259, Settembre 1971.


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