Giovanni Carlo Aliberti
Gian Carlo Aliberti, also Giancarlo or Giovanni Carlo Aliberti, (February 13, 1670 - February 2, 1727)[1] was a prolific Piedmontese painter of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.[2]
Biography
He was born in Canelli and died in Asti. He trained likely with Giovanni Battista Fariano in Asti. By the turn of the century, he moved to Rome, to pursue further training. Returning to Asti, he wed the daughter of the painter Giovanni Antonio Laveglia. In Canelli, there are two canvases, Death of St Joseph and an Immaculate Conception located in the parish church of San Tommaso. Other paintings in the city include a Pentecost, an Epiphany, a St Roch among the pestilent and a St George.[3]
Many of his frescoes, painted in the Rococo manner, have been lost along with the churches for which they were made. Two from Sant’Anastasio, Asti (demolished in 1907) are conserved in the town’s civic art gallery in Palazzo Mazzetti: Tobias and the Angel, and Healing of the Paralyzed. The Gallery also exhibits St Anne between St Carlo Borromeo and Ste Cristina.[4] The Miracle of Saint Clare is depicted at the church of Santa Chiara in Cuneo.[2]
His works are also found in Santa Caterina, Casale Monferrato; San Martino, La Morra; and Sant'Agostino, Cherasco.[5]
Notes
- ↑ Comune of Canelli, short biography.
- 1 2 V. Malfatto and P. Rogna, Asti nella storia delle sue vie.
- ↑ Canelli comune biography.
- ↑ Palazzo Mazzetti, Asti, Gallery of large canvases.
- ↑ Touring club italiano, Piemonte (non compresa Torino), Guida d'Italia, 1, 8th edn. (Milan: Touring Editore, 1976), pp. 144, 186, 233.
Further reading
- Entry for Gian Carlo Aliberti in Preface for an edition of Giorgio Vasari, Vite de’ più eccellenti pittori scultori e architetti, rev. by Guglielmo della Valle, 11 vols (Siena: Pazzani Carli, 1791–94) XI (1794), p. 36.