Francesco Conti (painter)
Biography
Conti was born in Florence, Italy, and spent some time studying art in Rome. He specialized in painting religious-themed works. He studied primarily under Giovanni Maria Morandi and Carlo Maratta. In 1738 he painted one of his most renowned works Madonna and Child with St. Sylvester the Pope, St. Paul and St. Catherine of Alexandria. He continued to paint up until his death in 1760.
Among his pupils was Anna Bacherini Piattoli.[2]
Gallery
- The death of King Josiah
- Madonna presenting the Christ Child to St. Felix of Cantalice
- Saint Joseph with the Christ Child
- Allegory of Music
- A Gentleman
gollark: "Do not multiply entities beyond necessity", not "simple things are always right".
gollark: Do you know what that *is*?
gollark: Some definitions of omnipotence exclude logically impossible stuff.
gollark: That's stupid.
gollark: "Conventional thought" includes stuff like the law of the excluded middle, which is important or any statement you make about god is basically meaningless because the opposite is true.
References
- Berti, Federico. "Francesco Conti (1681-1760)" (Firenze: Edifir, 2010)
- Profile of Anna Bacherini Piattoli in the Dictionary of Pastellists Before 1800.
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