Roberto Carignani PRICE CHARTS
1894 - 1988. Known for: Religious painting.
Roberto Carignali was an Italian painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, where he was a pupil of Michele Cammarano, Edoardo Dalbono and . Vincenzo Volpe. He exhibited for the first... Read full biography
Roberto Carignali was an Italian painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, where he was a pupil of Michele Cammarano, Edoardo Dalbono and . Vincenzo Volpe. He exhibited for the first time in Rome , then in Naples, where he became an appreciated painter. He made his debut together... Read full biography
Roberto Carignali was an Italian painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, where he was a pupil of Michele Cammarano, Edoardo Dalbono and . Vincenzo Volpe. He exhibited for the first time in Rome , then in Naples, where he became an appreciated painter. He made his debut together with Luigi Crisconio and was considered among the most promising artists of his generation. His artistic streak was encouraged by Neapolitan painters, such as Michele Cammarano, of whom some critics... Read full biography
Roberto Carignali was an Italian painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, where he was a pupil of Michele Cammarano, Edoardo Dalbono and . Vincenzo Volpe. He exhibited for the first time in Rome , then in Naples, where he became an appreciated painter. He made his debut together with Luigi Crisconio and was considered among the most promising artists of his generation. His artistic streak was encouraged by Neapolitan painters, such as Michele Cammarano, of whom some critics considered him an heir. He was a pupil of Edoardo Dalbono, Giuseppe De Sanctis and Vincenzo Volpe, artists linked to the school of Domenico Morelli. He painted for ecclesiastical patrons, distinguished by his bizarre and theatrical style. He left works... Read full biography
Roberto Carignali was an Italian painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Naples, where he was a pupil of Michele Cammarano, Edoardo Dalbono and . Vincenzo Volpe. He exhibited for the first time in Rome , then in Naples, where he became an appreciated painter. He made his debut together with Luigi Crisconio and was considered among the most promising artists of his generation. His artistic streak was encouraged by Neapolitan painters, such as Michele Cammarano, of whom some critics considered him an heir. He was a pupil of Edoardo Dalbono, Giuseppe De Sanctis and Vincenzo Volpe, artists linked to the school of Domenico Morelli. He painted for ecclesiastical patrons, distinguished by his bizarre and theatrical style. He left works in the Sanctuary of the Madonna di Campiglio... Read full biography

