Giuseppe Nogari

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Giuseppe Nogari (1699 - 1763) was an Venetian painter of the Rococo, where he painted mainly painted half-body portraits, either real or of historical and religious figures. They are striking for their emotional content, subdued decoration and coloration, and often display aged individuals in somewhat homely or shabby attire with a dark background.

He is said to have trained under Antonio Balestra and followed the styles of Piazzetta, Rosalba Carriera, Jacopo Amigoni, and Rembrandt. He was patronized by two German Patrons in Venice, Sigismund Streit and Johann Matthias von der Schulenburg.

From 1739 to 1742 Nogari worked for the House of Savoy in Turin, painting canvases and decorating the Royal Palace of Turin and the hunting lodge at Stupinigi. In 1756, he became a member of the Venetian Accademia di Pittura e Scultura. Alessandro Longhi was one of his pupils. In 1997, a painting of Nogari was used in a sting wherein employees, including a Old Master's expert of Sotheby's in London, smuggled this painting out of Italy.

Source

Partial Anthology