Jump to content

Giuseppe Canella

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ser Amantio di Nicolao (talk | contribs) at 04:56, 14 October 2016 (Cat-a-lot: Copying from Category:18th-century Italian painters to Category:Italian male painters). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Giuseppe Canella
Veduta del canale Naviglio preso sul ponte di S. Marco in Milano, 1834 (Fondazione Cariplo)
Born(1788-07-28)July 28, 1788
Verona
DiedSeptember 11, 1847(1847-09-11) (aged 59)
Florence

Giuseppe Canella (28 July 1788 – 11 September 1847),[1] also referred to as Giuseppe Canella the Elder, was an Italian painter.

Biography

Initially trained by his father Giovanni, an architect, fresco painter and set designer, Giuseppe Canella started out producing stage sets and decorating stately homes in Verona and Mantua. His brother, Carlo Canella, was also a painter. It may have been under the influence of Pietro Ronzoni, a landscape painter of international renown active in Verona, that he took up landscape painting. The first views were not produced until 1815, after a short stay in Venice. After making his debut at the Fine Art Exposition at the Brera Academy of 1818, he made a long journey through Spain, the Netherlands and France for study purposes.

The set of 13 landscapes shown at the Expositions at the Brera in 1831 proved a great success with the public and critics alike, not least due to the fame achieved in Paris with works exhibited in the Salons, commissions from Louis Philippe of Orleans and the award of a gold medal in 1830. He returned to Milan in 1832 and devoted his energies to urban views characterised by an interest in the events of contemporary life and an atmospheric form of portrayal in evident competition with Giovanni Migliara. Landscape came to predominate as from 1835 with subjects drawn from the Lombard countryside and lakes. The focus on poor and humble aspects of life formed part of the artist’s fundamental naturalism and coincided with a moralistic approach derived from the novelist Alessandro Manzoni. Crucial importance attaches in the artist’s mature period to his trip to Rome and Naples in 1838–39.

Among his pupils or painters influenced by Canela were Felice Giuseppe Vertua, Constantino Prinetti, and Giovanni Renica.[2] His son, Giuseppe Canella the Younger (Venice, 1837 - Padoa, 1913), was also a painter.

Works

Boulevard Montmatre, Paris

Among his works are:

Notes

  1. ^ Life dates are from Saur 2000, vol. 2, p. 412.
  2. ^ *Caimi, Antonio (1862). Delle arti del designo e degli artisti nelle provincie di Lombardia dal 1777-1862. Milan, Italy: Presso Luigi di Giacomo Pirola. pp. 96–99.

References

Other projects

Media related to Giuseppe Canella (1788) at Wikimedia Commons