Angelo Solimena


Angelo Solimena was an Italian painter, father of the better known Francesco Solimena.

Life

Solimena was born in Serino, near Naples, on 17 November 1629. He was a pupil of Francesco Guarino, with whom he seems to have collaborated on canvases in the church of the Corpo di Cristo in San Sossio di Serino. One of his earliest paintings is the Pentecost, dated 1654, in San Michele in Solofra, the town in which Guarnino also worked.
His Deposition is derived from Federico Barocci’s painting of that subject in Perugia Cathedral. His Virgin and Saints and St. Francis Requesting Plenary Indulgence for Porziuncola are close to the art of Massimo Stanzione, and this similarity recurs in the Virgin of the Purification and in the Trinity.
Between 1674 and 1675 Angelo completed an ambitious decorative scheme involving many frescoes depicting saints and biblical scenes for the church of San Giorgio in Salerno. The paintings in the left apse of Salerno Cathedral and the frescoes of the parish church in Raito also belong to this period.
Two collaborations with his son Francesco Solimena, Paradise and the Vision of St Cyril of Alexandria, show him moving towards the more modern style of Giovanni Lanfranco and Luca Giordano. After the Coronation of St. Anne there followed the Trinity with St. Michael in the assembly hall of Nocera Cathedral. Between 1689 and 1694 he completed the decoration of Sarno Cathedral commissioned by Bishop de Tura, with biblical scenes and several compositions featuring St. Michael. The influence of Carlo Maratta’s classicism, which formed the basis of the teaching in Francesco Solimena’s academy, is very clear in his late work, for instance Virgin ''with St. Matthew and St. Peter''. Solimena died in Nocera Inferiore in February 1716.