Giovanni Battista Ramenghi Explained

Giovanni Battista Ramenghi (1521, Bologna - 1601, Bologna) was an Italian painter. He is sometimes known as Bagnacavallo junior or Bagnacavallo the Younger to distinguish him from his father Bartolomeo Ramenghi (known as Bagnacavallo).[1]

Life

He trained in his father's studio and accompanied Primaticcio on his trip to France, where he was influenced for a time by the Fontainebleau School. Working to meet the strictures of the Counter-Reformation, Ramenghi was one of the most conservative painters of the Bolognese school of the time, moving on from Raphael but refusing to be influenced by the early work of the young Annibale Carracci

Works

References

  1. Ciro Massaroli, Bartolomeo Ramenghi Pittore e sua famiglia: memoria genealogica, in "Giornale araldico" XXVII (1900), pp.
  2. Ettore Contarini, Il quadro dei Misteri del Rosario, dipinto di Giambattista Ramenghi seniore detto il Bagnacavallo: notizie e documenti, Imola 1896.