An image should appear at this position in the text. To use the entire page scan as a placeholder, edit this page and replace "{{missing image}}" with "{{raw image|Cyclopedia of painters and paintings - Volume I.djvu/108}}". Otherwise, if you are able to provide the image then please do so. For guidance, see Wikisource:Image guidelines and Help:Adding images. |
Ariadne, Luca Giordano, Dresden Gallery.
of Pedro de las Cuevas; painted when fourteen years old pictures for high altar of the Carmelites in Toledo, and at twenty-five reckoned one of the best painters in Madrid. Employed with Camilo, Alonzo Cano, and other distinguished artists to paint the portraits of the kings of Spain, when the ancient hall of the kings in the Royal Palace was renovated. Executed many pictures for churches and convents. Works: Tribute Money, Charles V. and Philip II., Madrid Museum. Died in want at the general hospital of Madrid.—Stirling, ii. 715; Viardot, 284; Meyer, Künst. Lex., ii. 248; Madrazo, 350.
ARIENTI, CARLO, born in Milan in
1800, died in Bologna, April 3, 1873.
History painter, pupil of the schools of the
Brera, Milan; was professor at the Milan
Academy when called to Turin by King
Charles Albert, who ordered him to paint
for the staircase of the palace a victory of
the Italians over the Austrians. This exiled
him from Milan, but he was made president
of the Academia Albertini, Turin, and afterward
director of the Bologna Academy.
Works: Beatrice di Tenda, Jeremiah, Orestes,
Phædra and Hippolytus, Francesca da
Rimini, Origin of the Lombard League
(Quirinal, Rome); Portrait of Bellini (Naples
Conservatory of Music); Barbarossa (Royal
Palace, Turin).—Kunst-Chronik, viii. 466.
ARIOSTO, portrait, Titian, Cobham Hall,
England; canvas, H. 2 ft. 9 in. × 2 ft. 1 in.;
signed. The poet is walking, the upper
part of his body seen in profile behind a
parapet, the face turned toward the spectator.
History unknown; not certainly a
portrait of Ariosto, but may be the picture
of the Lopez collection, sold in London in
time of Charles I.; and this in turn may
have been the portrait which Baruffaldi says
was sent to Padua in 1554 by Ariosto's son
Virginio. The copy formerly in the Palazzo
Manfrini passed to Barker collection in 1857,
and was afterward sold. Other copies in
the Vicenza Gallery, in the Tosi collection
at Brescia, and in the Butler-Johnstone collection,
London.—C. & C., Titian, i. 197;
Baruffaldi's Ariosto, 251.