Luigi Premazzi
Luigi Premazzi | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 17 December 1891 | (aged 77)
Resting place | Tikhvin Cemetery, Saint Petersburg |
Nationality | Italian-Russian |
Alma mater | Brera Academy of Fine Arts; Private school of Giovanni Migliara |
Known for | watercolour painting |
Movement | Orientalist |
Elected | Member Academy of Arts (1854) Professor by rank (1861) |
Luigi Premazzi, also russified as Ludwig Osipovich Premazzi[1] (Milan, 1814 – Istanbul, Ottoman Empire, 1891) was an Italian painter, mainly of watercolor vedute.
Biography
[edit]Premazzi attended the Brera Academy of Fine Arts and then the private school run by Giovanni Migliara. His early watercolours, based on the works of his master, were produced for the lithographic industry. His oeuvre is characterised by a repertoire of urban views (vedute) produced in accordance with the dictates of perspective painting.
While most of these are set in Milan, other Italian cities were also featured in later years. His smooth, precise painting also shows the influence of his contemporary Luigi Bisi in its descriptive focus on architectural detail. He presented work regularly at the exhibitions of the Società Promotrice di Belle Arti in Turin from 1842 to 1848 as well as those of the Brera Academy. Having moved to Saint Petersburg around 1850, he became a teacher at the Imperial School of Fine Arts there in 1861. Frequent stays in the Caucasus and the Middle East provided new subjects for his paintings, which he continued to send to Italian exhibitions, where they aroused wonder and curiosity.
He displayed many watercolors at the 1880 Exposition Nazionale of Fine Arts in Turin, including: Camera da pranzo; Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow; The Villa of Prince Voronzow in Crimea; The Convent of St George the Pure in Crimea; The Takeiseray and Capo di San Giorgio near Balaclava. Many of his depictions were of ruins of Christian churches in the Caucasus. He also painted Défilé du Darial (Darial Gorge), The Convent at Kutaisi (Gelati Monastery), and Mount Arafat.
In Tiflis (Tbilisi), he painted a watercolor of the Via dei Calzolari Asiatici; Houses and Tartar Bazaar : Angolo di Case sul gran mercato; Angolo di case al ponte Aolabar, Via Sienskaja, The Magnificent Aolobar Bridge over the Kura River, The Right Bank of the Kura River, and the Piazza del gran Mercato Maydan. He also painted a watercolor of the Italian vista of Baveno on Lago Maggiore. At the 1881 Venice Exposition, he displayed Vardzia and Convento scavato.[2]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Russian: Людвиг Осипович Према́цци. The archival records from the Imperial Academy of Arts, published as Petrov 1866, had the surname spelled as Primazzi (Russian: Примацци).
- ^ Dizionario degli Artisti Italiani Viventi: pittori, scultori, e Architetti, by Angelo de Gubernatis. Tipe dei Successori Le Monnier, 1889, page 390.
- Elena Lissoni, Luigi Premazzi, online catalogue Artgate by Fondazione Cariplo, 2010, CC BY-SA (source for the first revision of this article).
Further reading
[edit]- Bardovskaya, Larisa V.; et al. (1996). Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg (ed.). Луиджи Премацци. Акварели и рисунки [Luigi Premazzi: Watercolours and Drawings] (artbook / exhibition catalogue) (in Russian). Saint Petersburg: Slaviya. ISBN 5-88654-034-2.
- Petrov, Pyotr N. (1866). Сборник материалов для истории Императорской Санкт-Петербургской академии художеств за сто лет ее существования (in Russian). Vol. 3. Saint Petersburg: Gogenfelden and Co. pp. 153, 223, 382. OCLC 676719786.
- Sobko, Nikolai P. [in Russian] (1899). "Премацци, Людвиг Осипович". Словарь русских художников (in Russian). Vol. 3. Saint Petersburg: M. Stasyulevich. cols. 422–428. OCLC 889716402.
- Vollmer, Hans, ed. (1933). "Premazzi (Премацци), Luigi (Ludwig Ossipowitsch)". Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Künstler. Vol. 27. Leipzig: E. A. Seemann. p. 378. OCLC 1072962209.
External links
[edit]Media related to Luigi Premazzi at Wikimedia Commons
- Members of the Imperial Academy of Arts
- Academic staff of the Imperial Academy of Arts
- 19th-century Italian painters
- Italian male painters
- Italian vedutisti
- Italian Orientalist painters
- Painters from Milan
- Brera Academy alumni
- 1814 births
- 1891 deaths
- Burials at Tikhvin Cemetery
- 19th-century Italian male artists
- Painters from the Austrian Empire
- Immigrants to the Russian Empire