Gaspare Landi (6 January 1756 – 28 February 1830) was an Italian painter of the Neoclassic period, active in Rome and his native city of Piacenza.

Gaspare Landi
Self-portrait (1806)
President of the Accademia di San Luca
In office
1817 (1817)–1820 (1820)
Preceded byAntonio Canova
Succeeded byAlessandro Massimiliano Laboureur
Personal details
Born(1756-01-06)6 January 1756
Piacenza, Duchy of Parma
Died28 February 1830(1830-02-28) (aged 74)
Piacenza, Duchy of Parma
NationalityItalian
Known forPainting
AwardsOrder of the Iron Crown

Biography

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Landi is said to have been a fun-loving youth, but in 1781 he procured a subsidy to study painting in Rome from patron and distant relative, Marquis Giambattista Landi. At age 25, he moved to Rome to work under Domenico Corvi and Pompeo Battoni. He is considered a rival of Vincenzo Camuccini.

Two of his pictures were once in the Pinacoteca at Parma, Diomedes and Ulysses bearing off the Palladium (1783) and the Marriage of Abraham and Sarah. Above one of the altars in the church of the Santa Casa at Loreto there is a later work by this Landi showing the Madonna addolorata. A major work is his large canvas representing the fainting of Christ as he struggles along over the road to Calvary weighted down by the burden of the Cross, Lo Spasimo for San Giovanni in Canale at Piacenza.[1] It hung opposite Vincenzo Camuccini's Presentation. He painted a Deposition of the Virgin in the Tomb and Apostles at the empty Tomb of the Virgin (1804) for the choir of the Duomo of Piacenza[2]

Landi became a member of the Accademia di San Luca of Rome in 1805, professor of the theory of painting in 1812, and president of the Academy in 1817. He was also made a Chevalier of the Order of the Iron Crown by the Emperor, of the Order of Saint Joseph, and of a Neapolitan order by the King of Naples.[3] About 1820 he returned to Piacenza, intending to remain there, but soon tired of the monotonous existence of a provincial town and in 1824 reestablished himself at Rome. His last work was an Assumption and was placed in the church of San Francesco di Paola in Naples. He was offered a post as professor of the Academy of Venice, but stayed instead a president of the Academia di San Luca.[4]

He returned to Piacenza in 1829, where he died.

Selected paintings

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References

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  • Rollins Willard, Ashton (1900). History of Modern Italian Art. London: Longmans, Green & Co. pp. 274–278. Ashton Rollins Willard History Modern.
  • Bryan, Michael (1889). Walter Armstrong; Robert Edmund Graves (eds.). Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, Biographical and Critical. Vol. II L-Z. London: George Bell and Sons. p. 11.
  1. ^ Gli artisti piacentini, cronaca ragionata By Luigi Ambiveri Tipografia Francesco Solari, Piacenza, 1879. page 175.
  2. ^ L. Ambiveri, page 174-175.
  3. ^ L. Ambiveri, page 186-188.
  4. ^ L. Ambiveri, page 186-191.
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