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Cecco del Caravaggio

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Artist
  
Cecco del Caravaggio

Died
  
1620

Period
  
Baroque

Year
  
c. 1610–1620

Nationality
  
Italian

Medium
  
Oil painting

Cecco del Caravaggio Cecco del Caravaggio Wikipedia

Location
  
National Museum in Warsaw

Cecco del caravaggio top 6 facts


Cecco del Caravaggio (active c. 1610 – mid-1620s), is the name used for a Baroque artist working in Rome in the early decades of the 17th century, an important early follower of Caravaggio. He has been identified as Francesco Boneri (or Buoneri), although this is not universally accepted.

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Little is known about Cecco del Caravaggio. In his guide to contemporary artists written for fellow-collectors in about 1620, Considerazioni sulla Pittura, Giulio Mancini mentions a 'Francesco detto Cecco del Caravaggio' as one of the great master's more noteworthy followers. A 'Cecco' is recorded among French artists working with Agostino Tassi at Bagnaia in 1613–15, and hence the artist has been thought to be of French origin, while other scholars have detected a Spanish influence, but in 2001 the scholar Gianni Papi identified this Cecco del Caravaggio as the Lombard artist Francesco Boneri (or Buoneri), and this now seems to be generally although not universally accepted.

Cecco del Caravaggio 20100521145122AA Ashmolean Museum CECCO DEL CARAVAGGIO Flickr

None of Cecco's works are signed or dated and hence his oeuvre is difficult to identify, but he is associated with a number of genre pieces, portraits and religious works showing a clear debt to Caravaggio. His more important religious works include his Resurrection now in the Art Institute of Chicago and his Christ Expelling the Money Changers from the Temple.

Cecco del Caravaggio Cecco del Caravaggio39s 39The Resurrection39 The UCSB Current

An identification has also been made, (notably by the journalist Peter Robb in his 1998 biography of Caravaggio, M-The Man Who Became Caravaggio), between Francesco Boneri/Cecco del Caravaggio and the boy who models for a number of paintings done by Caravaggio in the period 1600/1606, including the famous Amor Vincit and the John the Baptist in the Capitoline Museum in Rome. The identification is based on the statements found in early authors that the model for Amor Vincit was a boy named Cecco who was also Caravaggio's servant and possibly pupil. As attractive as this idea is, it remains unproven.

Cecco del Caravaggio Il bergamasco Cecco del Caravaggio Storia e pittura del garzone di
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    References

    Cecco del Caravaggio Wikipedia