Costantino Sereno (1829, Casale Monferrato, Province of Alessandria - 1893, Turin)[1] was an Italian painter.
He was born in Casale Monferrato in the Piedmont and studied at the Albertina Academy until the early 1840s. At first, His work consisted mostly of historical paintings. He exhibited in 1881 at Milan with a genre painting called The Kilo. In 1884, he had exhibits in Rome and Turin with a set of paintings depicting a "Monacanda" (a candidate for a monastic order): Monacanda Before Pronouncing the Vows and Monacanda, an Hour Before Taking the Monastic Clothes. He also exhibited Discovery of a Bersagliere and A Kiss of Furtive Origin.[2]
Later, he presented decorative projects for the municipal theater in Casale Monferrato, as well as the ceiling of the and the curtain of the, both in Turin.[3]
Among his frescoes are those for the Duomo in Casale Monferrato (1860-1861), the Palazzo Carignano, the Sanctuary della Consolata, the, and the church of Santa Maria Ausiliatrice; the last four all in Turin. He also created Angels and the Assumption of the Virgin (1865) for the parish church of Fubine, near Alessandria. In addition to frescoes, he also designed mosaics and stained glass windows. He exhibited at the Turin Promotrice (Society for Promotion of the Arts) from 1844 to 1888, to tepid public reception, but abundant royal patronage.