PETRINI, Giuseppe Antonio - b. 1677 Carona, d. ~1756 Lugano - WGA

PETRINI, Giuseppe Antonio

(b. 1677 Carona, d. ~1756 Lugano)

Swiss painter. Now considered one of the most gifted and original artists of the Baroque from the Italian region in Switzerland, he was almost totally unknown before the exhibition of his work held at Lugano in 1960. However, neither a precise chronology of his life nor a comprehensive catalogue of his paintings has yet been established.

He studied with Bartolomeo Guidobono after 1700. His early works also suggest other Lombard, Venetian and Roman influences. His late works imply a knowledge of mystic Spanish painting, especially in the austere settings he favoured. He painted works in Como, Bergamo and perhaps Milan, but most of his pictures are located in Lugano and the surrounding area. He is also listed in at least three documents between 1711 and 1753 as fabbriciere of the church of Madonna d’Onegro, Carona, suggesting he had some architectural training.

A Philosopher
A Philosopher by

A Philosopher

Several series of half-figure idealised portraits by Petrini is known. They depict philosophers, astronomers, mathematicians, evangelists and personifications of seasons. His portraits of philosophers are in the tradition of Jusepe de Ribera and the young Luca Giordano. However, his use of form and colour moved away from Neapolitan Caravaggism of the seventeenth century and in these portraits Venetian influences can be detected.

A Philosopher
A Philosopher by

A Philosopher

Several series of half-figure idealised portraits by Petrini is known. They depict philosophers, astronomers, mathematicians, evangelists and personifications of seasons. His portraits of philosophers are in the tradition of Jusepe de Ribera and the young Luca Giordano. However, his use of form and colour moved away from Neapolitan Caravaggism of the seventeenth century and in these portraits Venetian influences can be detected.

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