- Carlo Bonavia
Carlo Bonavia was an Italian painter known for idyllic landscape paintings, engravings and drawings. He was active from 1740 until his death in 1788. He is thought to be from
Rome , but worked inNaples from about 1751 to 1788. He was trained in the Neapolitan landscape tradition ofSalvator Rosa (1615-1673) andLeonardo Coccorante (1680-1750), but was much more strongly influenced by the work ofClaude Joseph Vernet , who visited Naples in 1737 and 1746. Bonavia’s paintings share with Vernet’s a rococo palette of pale blues, creamy yellows, pinks and soft green, as well as an atmospheric, rather than analytical, approach to landscape. Like Vernet, Bonavia painted capricci in which real features of the Neapolitan countryside were placed in imaginary settings. Bonavia’s idyllic landscapes were popular souvenirs of theGrand Tour . Among his patrons were Lord Brudenell and Graf Karl Joseph Firmian, the Austrian ambassador to Naples 1753-8. Bonavia had a very successful career and was praised by Pietro Zani in his Enciclopedia Metodica Critico Ragionata delle Belle Arte (1794) as a fine painter of views and history subjects.The
Accademia di San Luca (Rome), theDulwich Picture Gallery , theFine Arts Museums of San Francisco , theHonolulu Academy of Arts , theMetropolitan Museum of Art , theMuseo di Capodimonte (Naples) andStourhead (Wiltshire, England) are among the public collections having paintings by Carlo Bonavia.References
*Constable, W.G., "Carlo Bonavia", "Art Quarterly", vol. XXII, No. 1, Spring, 1959, 19.
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