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Biscaino, Bartolomeo
(b Genoa, bapt 14 April 1629; d Genoa, 1657). Italian painter, draughtsman and etcher. He was taught by his father, Giovanni Andrea Biscaino, a mediocre landscape painter, and entered the workshop of Valerio Castello (ii), probably at the end of the 1640s. The chronology of his oeuvre, truncated by his early death in a plague, is hard to reconstruct. Only two paintings bear early documentation: St Ferrando Imploring the Virgin (Genoa, Pal. Bianco) and an untraced Flaying of Marsyas (see Manzitti, 1971, pl. 31). However, his graphic work had a continuing reputation: he was called a great draughtsman by Pellegrino Orlandi in his Abecedario pittorico (1704), and his etchings, of which over 40 are catalogued in Bartsch, were very favourably received, according to Antoine-Joseph Dezallier dArgenville (1762). About half the etchings are signed or initialled, and two are dated (Nativity, 1655, B. 22; St Mary Magdalene in the Desert, 1656, B. 38). From them it is possible to attribute further works, mostly small canvases, to Biscaino, and to characterize his development.
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