Rosa, Salvator (1615-1673)| Italian baroque painter, etcher, poet, and musician. Active in Florence 1640-49 and subsequently in Rome, he is important for having created a new style of landscape, wild, romantic, and sometimes macabre. He also wrote satirical verse. His Self Portrait (about 1645; National Gallery, London) is characteristically intense and theatrical. |
| Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries he was considered the archetype of the Romantic artist, passionate and rebellious. His landscapes influenced the pictureque landscapes of 18th-century English taste, and other works, such as his bizarre studies of witchcraft, had a strong impact on the development of late 18th-century Gothic taste, particularly in the novel. Good examples of his art are Saul and the Witch of Endor and Battlepiece (both Louvre, Paris), and The Bridge (Pitti, Florence). |
| Born near Naples, Rosa studied art under an uncle, Paolo Greco, and his father-in-law, Francesco Fracanzo (a follower of José de Ribera). The painter Giovanni Lanfranco bought his Hagar, and started him on a prosperous career. He worked mainly in Rome with an interval in Florence, 1642-47, being invited there by the Duke of Tuscany. |
| His invention of a new type of romantic art - typically rocky landscapes with ruins and cloaked, banditlike figures - was inspired by southern Italy. Following the example of the Italian artist Aniello Falcone (1600-1656), he also painted some battle scenes. |
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