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Here are all the paintings of Corrado Giaquinto 01
ID |
Painting |
Oil Pantings, Sorted from A to Z |
Painting Description |
1474 |
|
Justice and Peace |
1759-60
Museo del Prado, Madrid |
30009 |
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Birth of the Virgin |
mk67
Oil on canvas
28 3/8x40 9/16in
Uffizi,
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70660 |
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Justice and Peace |
Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 216 x 325 cm
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43284 |
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Moses Striking the Rock |
mk170
1743-1744
Oil on canvas
136.5x95cm
|
79023 |
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Portrait of Farinelli |
1753(1753)
Medium Oil on canvas
cyf |
1475 |
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Saints in Glory S |
1755
Museo del Prado, Madrid |
42055 |
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The birth of the Virgin |
mk166
1753
I Wave sbre cloth
72x103cm
Uffizi, Florence |
43283 |
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The Brazen Serpent |
mk170
1743-1744
Oil on canvas
136.5x95cm
|
66448 |
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The Holy Spirit |
Oil on canvas
64 x 48 cm
1750s |
68384 |
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Tobias and the Angel |
c. 1740
Oil on canvas
58 x 48 cm
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Corrado Giaquinto
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1703-1766
Italian
Corrado Giaquinto Galleries
He was born in Molfetta. As a boy he apprenticed with a modest local painter Saverio Porta, (c1667-1725), escaping the religious career his parents had intended for him. By October 1724, he left Molfetta, and along with his contemporaries Francesco de Mura (1696-1784) and Giuseppe Bonito (1707-1789), he trained from 1719-23 in the prolific Neapolitan studio of Francesco Solimena, either with Solimena or his pupil, Nicola Maria Rossi. Throughout his life, Giaquinto was a peripatetic painter, with long sojourns in Naples, Rome (between 1723-53), Turin (1733 and 1735-9), and Madrid (1753-1761).
In 1723, he moved to Rome to work in the studio of Sebastiano Conca. He painted in San Lorenzo in Damaso, San Giovanni Calibita, and the ceiling at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme. In March 1727, with Giuseppe Rossi as an assistant, Giaquinto opened an independent studio near the Ponte Sisto, in the parish of Saint Giovanni of the Malva in Rome. In 1734, he married Caterina Silvestri Agate.
The first documented work by his hand is Christ crucified with the Madonna, Saint John Evangelist, and Magdalene commissioned in 1730 by king John V of Portugal for the cathedral of the Mafra. In 1731, he received a prestigious commission, to execute frescoes in the church of San Nicola dei Lorenesi: Saint Nicholas water gush from cliff, three theologic and cardinal Virtues, and in the cupola Paradise. The latest restoration confirms Giaquinto stylistic independence from Solimena, and reveals his stylistic dependence on Luca Giordano.
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