Tito Conti

Tito Conti (1842–1924)[1] was an Italian painter, mainly of genre costume or historical subjects.

An Italian Beauty by Tito Conti. Circa 1880

Biography

He was born and lived in Florence, where he studied at the Institute of Fine Arts.[2]

He was resident professor at the Academic College of Fine Arts of Florence.[3] Among his works are: La Presentazione; Il quarto d'ora di Rabelais e La musica (1876); Il brindisi alla bettoliera; L'addio; Portrait of his wife; Il sospetto; Il Cantastorie; Il Moschettiere; and Per la passeggiata (1886, Florence).[4] Among his pupils was Artuno Ricci.

With regards to Conti, who he grouped in thematic to Francesco Vinea and Edoardo Gelli, the contemporary American art collector James Jackson Jarves described him relative to the other two as showing "more refinement and higher artistic culture". While praising his "painting of tapestried backgrounds, ornate furniture, and elaborate details", he also disparaged the thematic, saying: "He paints too well for his subject. If his creative faculty were equal to his execution, he would be the first painter of his day."[5]

gollark: So, has any stuff happened on SC lately?
gollark: You should make a Wikipedia page for "tamassia's algorithm for orthogonal graph drawings" then.
gollark: I hate the bizarre confusion between MiB and MB. It should *not* be a problem, but software is almost never clear about which one it displays.
gollark: Actual 1337 h4xx1ng is hard, so I mostly just try and find exploits in potatOS, which I also write.
gollark: They *really* want you to have an account.

References

  1. Museo of Genoa exhibit.
  2. Istituto Matteucci biography.
  3. http://www.aadfi.it/?accademico=conti-tito
  4. Dizionario degli Artisti Italiani Viventi: pittori, scultori, e Architetti, by Angelo de Gubernatis. Tipe dei Successori Le Monnier, 1889, page 137.
  5. The New School of Italian Painting and Sculpture, by James Jackson Jarves, Harper's Monthly, Volume 60, Number 358; March 1880, page 486-487.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.