Deposizione

Reference: S42209
Author Giuseppe Bernardino Bison
Year: 1827
Measures: 260 x 202 mm
Not Available

Reference: S42209
Author Giuseppe Bernardino Bison
Year: 1827
Measures: 260 x 202 mm
Not Available

Description

Lithograph, 1827, signed at lower left "Bison inv. and del.". In the lower right corner we find the editorial indications and the date "Lit. B. Degenhart Trieste 1827".

Magnificent proof, printed on contemporary paper, in perfect condition. On the verso there is an off-center print of the same subject. 

Bison was the last painter in the great tradition of Venetian eighteenth - century decoration. He studied at Brescia and in Venice where he was in the studio of Ancon Maria Zanetti. He remained in Venice until 1807, when he left for Trieste. His last years, 1831-44, were spent in Milan Mamy of his drawings are in the collection of the Castello Sforzesco, Milan, and he is well represented with a number of sheets in the Cooper - Hewite Museum. (For further in formation and bibliography , see A. Rizzi . Cento disegni del Bison - exhibition catalogue - Udine, 1962-63). 

Literature

C. Alberici, Le litografie di Giuseppe Bernardino Bison, in “Udine. Bollettino della Biblioteca e dei Musei Civici e delle Biennali d’arte Antica”, 3, 1964, pp. 5-17; Giuseppe Pavanello Alberto Craievich e Daniele D’Anza, Giuseppe Bernardino Bison, Collan

Giuseppe Bernardino Bison (Palmanova 1762 - Milano 1844)

He was born in Palmanova. When he was still a boy, his family moved to Brescia, where he saw the works of Girolamo Romani and decided to become a painter. Later, his family moved again, to Venice, where he enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia and worked with Costantino Cedini. While there, he became friends with the architect Gian Antonio Selva, and went with him to Ferrara in 1787 to help decorate the Palazzo Bottoni Shortly after, he was in Padua, working as a set designer for the Obizzi family and, in 1790, was commissioned to do decorations for the Castello del Catajo. Two years later, he did similar work at the Palazzo Maffetti-Manzoni, then moved to Treviso, where he did frescoes on the ceiling of the Church of Saint Andrew in Volpago del Montello, the oratory of the Villa Bragadin in Ceggia and secular decorations for several villas in Lancenigo [it] and Breda di Piave. From 1798 to 1800, he collaborated with Selva on decorations at the Palazzo Dolfin Manin in Venice. Moving on to Trieste, he collaborated with Matteo Pertsch and the sculptor Antonio Bosa (1780–1845) to provide decorations for the Palazzo Carciotti and the stock exchange building. In 1811, he was in Zara, working at the Palazzo del Governatore. This was followed by decorative work (now lost) at the theaters in Vipacco and Gorizia. At this time, he began to take advantage of a growing market for paintings in the homes of well-to-do non-aristocrats and, working in conjunction with a local art dealer named Tosoni, produced a wide variety of landscapes, vedute and other genres to satisfy local tastes. His canvases were expensive, but also very large. In 1831, despite his successes in Trieste, he began wandering again, returning briefly to Brescia, then settling in Milan where he took some smaller commissions, but was not very successful and died poor.

Literature

C. Alberici, Le litografie di Giuseppe Bernardino Bison, in “Udine. Bollettino della Biblioteca e dei Musei Civici e delle Biennali d’arte Antica”, 3, 1964, pp. 5-17; Giuseppe Pavanello Alberto Craievich e Daniele D’Anza, Giuseppe Bernardino Bison, Collan

Giuseppe Bernardino Bison (Palmanova 1762 - Milano 1844)

He was born in Palmanova. When he was still a boy, his family moved to Brescia, where he saw the works of Girolamo Romani and decided to become a painter. Later, his family moved again, to Venice, where he enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia and worked with Costantino Cedini. While there, he became friends with the architect Gian Antonio Selva, and went with him to Ferrara in 1787 to help decorate the Palazzo Bottoni Shortly after, he was in Padua, working as a set designer for the Obizzi family and, in 1790, was commissioned to do decorations for the Castello del Catajo. Two years later, he did similar work at the Palazzo Maffetti-Manzoni, then moved to Treviso, where he did frescoes on the ceiling of the Church of Saint Andrew in Volpago del Montello, the oratory of the Villa Bragadin in Ceggia and secular decorations for several villas in Lancenigo [it] and Breda di Piave. From 1798 to 1800, he collaborated with Selva on decorations at the Palazzo Dolfin Manin in Venice. Moving on to Trieste, he collaborated with Matteo Pertsch and the sculptor Antonio Bosa (1780–1845) to provide decorations for the Palazzo Carciotti and the stock exchange building. In 1811, he was in Zara, working at the Palazzo del Governatore. This was followed by decorative work (now lost) at the theaters in Vipacco and Gorizia. At this time, he began to take advantage of a growing market for paintings in the homes of well-to-do non-aristocrats and, working in conjunction with a local art dealer named Tosoni, produced a wide variety of landscapes, vedute and other genres to satisfy local tastes. His canvases were expensive, but also very large. In 1831, despite his successes in Trieste, he began wandering again, returning briefly to Brescia, then settling in Milan where he took some smaller commissions, but was not very successful and died poor.