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Carlo Francesco Nuvolone | Baroque painter


Carlo Francesco Nuvolone (Milan, 1608 or 1609 - Milan, 1661 or 1662) was an Italian painter** of religious subjects and portraits who was active mainly in Lombardy.
He became the leading painter in Lombardy in the mid-17th century, producing works on canvas as well as frescoes.
Because his style was perceived as close to that of Guido Reni** he was nicknamed il Guido della Lombardia (the Guido of Lombardy).



  • Life
Carlo Francesco Nuvolone was born in Milan. His father Panfilo Nuvolone was a painter of frescoes and altarpieces, in a style still linked to late Mannerism** and of still lifes. Carlo Francesco had a brother called Giuseppe who also became a painter.
After working with his father, Carlo Francesco studied at the Accademia Ambrosiana in Milan under Giovanni Battista Crespi (il Cerano). In that studio he would have encountered Daniele Crespi and Giulio Cesare Procaccini.
He later worked in Milan and its environs. During the 1650s, Nuvolone painted frescoes for the Cappella di San Michele in the Certosa di Pavia and contributed to the decorations of the sacro monte (hillside shrine) at Varese, an important local pilgrimage site. He later also painted frescos at the Sacro Monte di Orta. His brother occasionally assisted him with his fresco work.
Among his pupils were Giuseppe Zanata, Federigo Panza, Filippo Abbiati and Pietro Maggi.


  • Work
Carlo Francesco Nuvolone worked as an easel painter as well as a fresco artist. His subjects were mainly religious and he realised many altarpieces and devotional works. He also left a number of portraits.
His early works showed the influence of the latest developments in Lombard painting. He had in particular adopted from Giulio Cesare Procaccini the close attention to the handling of light and shadow as well as the careful study of facial expressions. Other early influences include Daniele Crespi and Francesco Cairo.
His first signed and dated work, the Miracle of St Martha (1636, Venegono Inferiore, Seminario Arcivescovile) also shows the influence of Morazzone.
The Death of Lucrezia, executed in several versions, reveals the soft, atmospheric quality of his art, often explained by Murillo's work, although it is not clear where he would have seen Murillo's works.
His altarpieces from the 1640s, such as the Assumption of the Virgin (Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan), demonstrate his interest in Anthony van Dyck**. An outstanding example from this period is The purification of the Virgin (1645, Museo Civico, Piacenza).
Nuvolone was also active as a portrait painter working in the Lombard style with its penchant for a strikingly detailed portrayal of the sitter's features and garments and a lively depiction of the play of light and shadow.
These portraits also show influences from portrait painting in Genoa, which in turn was influenced by the Flemish portrait painters such as van Dyck** who had resided there.
He painted, together with his brother, a portrait of the family Nuvolone showing him at his easel surrounded by his family, including his father and brother and a few young people playing musical instruments. | © Wikipedia























Carlo Francesco Nuvolone (Milano, 1609 - Milano, 1662) è stato un pittore Italiano**.
Esponente, come il fratello minore Giuseppe Nuvolone (1619-1703), della scuola lombarda del XVII secolo, Carlo Francesco frequentò l'Accademia Ambrosiana dove fu allievo del padre Panfilo Nuvolone (1581-1651) e di Giovanni Battista Crespi detto il Cerano (1557-1632).
  • Biografia
La sua prima opera firmata è il Miracolo di santa Marta, oggi conservato nel seminario arcivescovile di Venegono Inferiore. 
Nel 1631 dipinse La Madonna con il Bambino tra sant'Anna e san Giuseppe appare a san Vincenzo - olio su tela cm 255 x 160 del 1631 - posto nella cappella di Sant'Anna, transetto destro, della chiesa parrocchiale dei Santi Vincenzo e Anastasio a Varallo Pombia.
Nel 1645 dipinse la Purificazione della Vergine, dipinto conservato presso il Museo civico di Piacenza.
Lavorò alla Certosa di Pavia, in particolare alla cappella di San Michele, e dipinse molte tele con soggetti sacri e ritratti.
Lavorò al Sacro Monte di Varese eseguendo gli affreschi della III e della V cappella, e al Sacro Monte di Orta, dipingendo la X e XVII Cappella.
Dipinse anche alcune cappelle della collegiata di San Lorenzo a Chiavenna e alcuni suoi dipinti sono conservati presso la chiesa di Santo Stefano ad Appiano Gentile.
Alla sua produzione profana, particolarmente apprezzata dai collezionisti, appartengono le due belle tele oggi conservate presso l'Accademia Tadini di Lovere che rappresentano Susanna con i vecchioni e Giuseppe e la moglie di Putifarre. Morì a Milano nel 1662. | © Wikipedia





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Natalia Bryliova, 1984 | Figurative painter


Natalia Bryliova /Наталья Брилева is an Belarusian painter known for working in the Figurative style.
Bryliova was born in Minsk, Belarus in 1984.
Studied at Minks and in France.

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George Henry Boughton RA | Genre painter


George Henry Boughton RA (December 4, 1833 - January 19, 1905) was an Anglo-American landscape and genre painter, illustrator and writer.
Boughton was born in Norwich in Norfolk, England, the son of farmer William Boughton. The family emigrated to the United States in 1835, and he grew up in Albany, New York where he started his career as a self-taught artist. At this early stage, he was influenced by the artists of the Hudson River School.

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Filippo Indoni | Genre painter


Filipo Indoni (1842-1908) was an Italian painter** who painted in the Realist style.
He often created lively scenes of peasants and lower class people playing, laughing and generally being care.
Indoni made these formerly forgotten people in the art world shine, while his fellow artists were portraying them in darker themes. Indoni was particularly talented with watercolors, and painted a number of scenes of peasants** and country people in watercolor.



Unlike many other artists who portray peasants and workers, Indoni’s subjects are generally happy and jubilant.
This is because Indoni’s goal was to portray them as being people that are proud of their hard work, as opposed to being downtrodden, and was Indoni’s response to the idealistic, but unrealistic styling of formerly popular Romanticism.












Filipo Indoni (1842-1908) attivo a Roma nella seconda metà del XIX secolo.
Pittore di genere**, di paesaggio e di soggetti classici, realizzati a olio e ad acquerello, fece uso di uno stile accuratamente realistico, apprezzato soprattutto dal mercato straniero.
A Roma espose nel 1872 alla Mostra della Società Amatori e Cultori delle Belle Arti (Costumi delle campagne romane) e alla Esposizione Internazionale del 1883 (Le gioie del viaggio); fu anche presente alle esposizioni di Firenze nel 1880 e di Torino nel 1884 (Costume dell’Impero).
Per il collegio Nazareno di Roma eseguì il ritratto di Alessandro Torlonia. | © Istituto Matteucci.