Vincenzo Riolo (February 14, 1772 in Palermo, Sicily – July 5, 1837) was an Italian painter of the Neoclassical style, active mainly in his native Sicily.[1]
Biography
editHe trained in Palermo initially with Antonio Manno and Francesco Sozzi,[2] but at the age of twenty moved to Rome to work under Giovanni Battista Wicar. Among his contemporaries in Palermo was Giuseppe Patania.
He married Anna, the daughter of the painter Giuseppe Velasquez in Palermo. In 1828, he replaced his father in law as professor at the Regia Accademia del Nudo in Palermo. Riolo died during the Cholera epidemic of 1837, and was replaced as professor by another pupil of Velasco, Salvatore Lo Forte.
He painted a portrait of his friend, Vincenzo Monti. Among other works, he painted frescoes in the Palazzo Tasca and Gangi, in the Real Casino (Villa) della Favorita, the church of Sant'Ignazio all'Olivella, and the Royal Palace (Reggia) of Ficuzza.[3] He died in 1837 during a cholera epidemic in Palermo[4]
References
edit- ^ Galleria Roma, short biography.
- ^ Biografie e ritratti d'illustri Siciliani morti nel cholera l'anno 1837, by Antonino Linares page 205-216.
- ^ Siracusa website, entry on Riolo.
- ^ A. Linares, page 205-216.