About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: Aimo Maggi, Andrea Toresani, Angelo Everardi, Antonio Cifrondi, Antonio Dusi, Antonio Gandini, Antonio Paglia, Antonio Pasinetti, Bonifacio Bembo, Camillo Rama, Carlo Bacchiocco, Carlo Frigerio, Cristoforo Rosa, Dionisio Boldo, Domenico Bruni, Domenico Carretti, Domenico Vantini, Enrico Albericci, Faustino Bocchi, Faustino Raineri, Filippo Zaniberti, Floriano Ferramola, Francesco Filippini, Francesco Giugno, Francesco Monti (il Brescianino), Francesco Paglia, Francesco Ricchino, Francesco Savani, Gaudenzio Botti, Giacomo Barucco, Giacomo Ceruti, Giacomo Stella, Giorgio Duranti, Giovanni Antonio Capello, Giovanni Antonio da Brescia, Giovanni Antonio Zaddei, Giovanni Battista Cimaroli, Giovanni Giacomo Borni, Giovanni Maria da Brescia, Giovanni Pietro da Cemmo, Giovita Brescianino, Girolamo Romani, Girolamo Savoldo, Giuseppe Bernardino Bison, Giuseppe Pirovani, Giuseppe Tortelli, Giuseppe Zola, Grazio Cossali, Lattanzio Gambara, Lodovico Gallina, Luca Mombello, Luigi Basiletti, Marco Ricchiedeo, Mario Bettinelli, Moretto da Brescia, Ottavio Amigoni, Ottavio Viviani, Paolo Zoppo, Piermaria Bagnadore, Pietro Avogadro, Pietro Marone, Pietro Scalvini, Pompeo Ghitti, Prospero Rabaglio, Sante Cattaneo, Saverio Gandini, Tiburzio Baldini, Tommaso Bona, Tommaso Sandrino, Vincenzo Civerchio, Vincenzo Foppa. Excerpt: Giovanni Battista Cimaroli (1687-1771) was an Italian painter of the late Baroque period. He was born in Salo on Lake Garda, not far from Brescia. He studied under Antonio Aureggio and later in Bologna with the landscape painter Antonio Calza, before moving to Venice around 1713. Cimaroli's rustic landscapes are reminiscent of the Arcadian scenes of Francesco Zuccarelli, influenced by a tradition of Lombardian realism. In c. 1722-6, Cimaroli collaborated with Canaletto (amongst other Venetian painters) on Owen...