Olivio Sòzzi
Olivio Sòzzi or Sozzi (1696, Palermo – 1765, Spaccaforno) was an Italian painter, active in Sicily during the Rococo period.
Biography
He obtained his first training in the local studio of Filippo Tancredi, he then moved in 1729 along with Gaspare Serenario to Rome to work with Sebastiano Conca. He befriended Corrado Giaquinto. He returned to Palermo in 1740, and moved to Catania in 1750. He was very prolific in Sicily, painting sacred subjects in oil and fresco in numerous churches and monasteries. In his later years he worked in the southwest of the island, decorating the church of San Sebastiano in Melilla (1752), and the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore in Ispica (1763), near Ragusa. He died from a risk faced by fresco painters of ceilings, falling from a scaffold built to decorate a chapel ceiling in the Basilica at Ispica.
His daughter married the painter Vito D'Anna of Palermo; the latter was helping him in his last work at Ispica. His works can be found in Agrigento, Catania,[1] Messina, Siracusa, Trapani, Palermo, and Ragusa.[2][3]
References
- ^ Church of Santissima Trinita in Catania.
- ^ biography for exhibit of Sozzi.
- ^ Lanzi, Luigi (1853). Translated by Thomas Roscoe (ed.). History of Painting in Italy. Vol. II. London; Googlebooks: Henry Bohn, Publishers. p. 64.