Giuseppe Signorini Explained

Giuseppe Signorini
Birth Date:1857
Birth Place:Rome
Death Date:1932
Nationality:Italian
Education:Accademia di San Luca
Known For:Painter

Giuseppe Signorini (1857–1932) was an Italian painter, mainly of orientalist subjects.[1]

Biography

He was born in Rome in 1857. He studied at the Accademia di San Luca, and then worked under Aurelio Tiratelli, who introduced him to the very best Italian artists of the period. He mastered the technique of watercolor very early in his career.[2]

He often traveled to the Paris Salon exhibitions, and was influenced by the styles and orientalist themes expressed by painters like Mariano Fortuny, Ernest Meissonier, and Gérôme. He developed a substantial collection of Islamic art and textiles. He also painted portraits in costume garb. He maintained studios in both Paris and Rome.[3]

He painted a design for an Arabic Man with Musket found at Art Museum of Princeton.[4] He painted in watercolor a costume drama depicting a Priest and Two Men Seated at a Table found at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Italian 19th Century Drawings & Watercolors: An Album, by Roberta jeanne Marie Olson (1976).
  2. Olson, R.J.M., Italian 19th Century Drawings & Watercolors: An Album : Camuccini & Minardi to Mancini & Balla, Shepard Gallery, 1976, n.p.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=j89YnPJ7CmMC The Orientalists
  4. http://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/maker/12891 Princeton Museum
  5. http://metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/346154 Met Museum