Maurelio Scanavini

Italian painter

Maurelio Scanavini or Scannavini (Ferrara, 7 May 1665 – 1 June 1698) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period, mainly active in Ferrara.

Biography

He trained as a fresco painter with Francesco Ferrari in Ferrara, then spent some time in Bologna, where he worked as an oil canvas painter under Carlo Cignani, at a time when Giacomo Parolini was also a pupil. He was a friend of the painter Baruffaldi. He is called the Leccardino and Laderchi recounts a small scandal when Scanavini painted a dog licking himself in a canvas, afterwards obscured, for the Oratory of San Crispino.[1]

He is said to have died from melancholy from lack of payment for his work. Barotti quotes: "poverty and misfortune, who accompanied him wherever he went, were the reasons for his death".[2]

References

  1. ^ Fondazione Carife, Rinaldo and Armida painting. Archived 2014-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Pitture e Scolture che si trovano nelle Chiese della Citta di Ferrara By Cesare Barotti, page 28.
  • Camillo Laderchi (1856). La pittura ferrarese, memorie. Googlebooks. pp. 178.


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