Giuseppe Isola Explained

Giuseppe (Tommaso Giuseppe) Isola (Genoa, April 7, 1808 – Genoa, July 21, 1893) was an Italian painter.

Biography

He was the son of Gaetano Isola and Maria Annunziata Rolleri, during his youth he displayed his works in his father's furniture shop. His talent was noticed by marquess Giancarlo Serra, who became his patreon and allowed him to study painting in the Accademia Ligustica di Belle Arti and afterwards to travel Tuscany, Latium and Lombardy to improve his skills. In Liguria, Giuseppe focused on learning the fresco styles commonly used by artists in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.[1]

His artistic debut took place in 1834, when he presented his portrait titled La Congiura di Gian Luigi Fieschi in the Accademia Ligustica. Giuseppe also presented Il conte di Carmagnola condannato a morte dal Senato di Venezia si congeda dalla famiglia and l'Assassinio di Alessandro de' Medici in1836.[2]

Maria Drago wrote a letter in 1838 to her son Giuseppe Mazzini, an Italian national activist, noting how Isola was arrested and questioned in regards to his painting La morte di Opizzino d'Alzate, 1837, as the faces of the conjurants depicted in the work were similar to several patriots from Genoa.[3] [4]

Starting from 1841 Isola created some works commissioned by the Savoia family, such as the paintings Alcuni drappelli de' dragoni del re sbaragliano i Francesi sotto Mondovì and La strage degli innocenti which he made in Turin, where he was nominated as honorary historical painter at the court of Charles Albert of Sardinia, as well as several frescos in the halls of Palazzo Reale in Genoa.

In the following years Isola worked under commission producing works such as the fresco of the allegory of Commercio dei Liguri for the rooftop of the hall of Maggior Consiglio in Palazzo Ducale, Genoa and il Trionfo della Scienza in Liguria on the roof of the main hall of the Università di Genova, which was destroyed in World War II.

As an acknowledgment of his works Isola became an honorary professor in the Accademia Ligustica di Belle Arti in 1845, where he taught painting courses (from 1848 to 1851), nudes (from 1851 to 1871) and realism (from 1872). He was an associate of the Accademia di San Luca in Rome as well as for the academies of Bologna and Perugia, and the director of the galerries of Palazzo Bianco and Palazzo Rosso. Isola was friends with sculptors Giovanni Duprè and Santo Varni, as well as Massimo d'Azeglio, Giuseppe Frascheri and composer Giuseppe Verdi. Giuseppe also taught art to Gabriele Castagnola, Santo Bertelli and Nicolò Barabino[5]

List of Works

Giuseppe Isola's most notable wortks are as follows:[5]

References

  1. Web site: Chiesa Collegiata di S.Ambrogio in Varazze . 2013-05-16.
  2. Web site: Palazzo Rosso, sala 28 sala dei ritratti . 2013-05-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120121141934/http://www.museidigenova.it/spip.php?article80 . 21 January 2012.
  3. Web site: Galleria d'Arte Moderna di Genova Nervia, sale 6,7 e 8 . 2013-05-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131005094247/http://www.museidigenova.it/spip.php?article285 . 5 October 2013.
  4. Web site: Ritratti di Niccolò Paganini . 2013-05-16 . 19 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131119085742/http://www.niccolopaganini.it/galleria.php.
  5. Web site: Giuseppe Isola sul Dizionario biografico degli italiani Treccani .
  6. Web site: Galleria d'Arte Moderna di Genova Nervia, sale 6,7 e 8 .
  7. Web site: Ritratti di Niccolò Paganini . 2022-03-15 . 2013-11-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131119085742/http://www.niccolopaganini.it/galleria.php . dead .
  8. Web site: Palazzo Rosso, sala 28 sala dei ritratti .
  9. Web site: Autoritratto di Giuseppe Isola .
  10. Web site: Chiesa Collegiata di S.Ambrogio in Varazze .
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