Bartolomeo Ignazio Capello

Bartolomeo Ignazio Capello (Borgo di Valsugana, Trento, Italy, 1689 - 1768) was an Italian painter in a late Baroque style.

Biography

He studied in Venice under Gregorio Lazzarini and Antonio Balestra; then traveled to Modena where he created copies of the work of Correggio. He was employed to paint for the Court of the Elector of Mainz; and in the Villa Giovanelli Colonna in Noventa Padovana, in Trento near Prato and Saracini; for the residence of Cardinal Schönborn in Speyer, and also for patrons in Salzburg.[1]

gollark: Also, I may be wrong but I think a lot of generation things are more efficient at larger scales rather than smaller ones.
gollark: I'm not sure that's a good thing, though - if you have more interconnected locations, they can load-balance in case of high demand.
gollark: Isn't it already *fairly* decentralized? Different regions have their own grids, sort of thing?
gollark: Personally, I don't think anything which heavily centralizes power, i.e. dictators or centrally planned economies, is a good idea.
gollark: Well, I finished reading... yet another discussion on communism, I guess?

References

  1. Scrittori ed artisti trentini, by Francesco Ambrosi, Giovanni Zippel Editor, 1883, Trento, page 95.



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