1627 - 1715. Known for: Painting, astronomy.
The son of a painter, Onorio Marinari started his artistic career under the auspices of the highly successful Carlo Dolci, whose style he convincingly emulated. Although his earliest works often...
Read full biography The son of a painter, Onorio Marinari started his artistic career under the auspices of the highly successful Carlo Dolci, whose style he convincingly emulated. Although his earliest works often repeat Dolci inventions or at the very least imitate his master's refined pictorial style, Marinari's...
Read full biography The son of a painter, Onorio Marinari started his artistic career under the auspices of the highly successful Carlo Dolci, whose style he convincingly emulated. Although his earliest works often repeat Dolci inventions or at the very least imitate his master's refined pictorial style, Marinari's paintings tend towards a greater narrative expression and his increasingly dynamic compositions owe more to his short apprenticeship with Volterrano than to Dolci. Indeed in his Vita, Gabburri talks of...
Read full biography The son of a painter, Onorio Marinari started his artistic career under the auspices of the highly successful Carlo Dolci, whose style he convincingly emulated. Although his earliest works often repeat Dolci inventions or at the very least imitate his master's refined pictorial style, Marinari's paintings tend towards a greater narrative expression and his increasingly dynamic compositions owe more to his short apprenticeship with Volterrano than to Dolci. Indeed in his Vita, Gabburri talks of Marinari's perfect blend of these two artists' styles....
Read full biography The son of a painter, Onorio Marinari started his artistic career under the auspices of the highly successful Carlo Dolci, whose style he convincingly emulated. Although his earliest works often repeat Dolci inventions or at the very least imitate his master's refined pictorial style, Marinari's paintings tend towards a greater narrative expression and his increasingly dynamic compositions owe more to his short apprenticeship with Volterrano than to Dolci. Indeed in his Vita, Gabburri talks of Marinari's perfect blend of these two artists' styles.