Background
Giuseppe Cesari was born in Arpino, Italy in February 1568. His father had been a native of Arpino, but Giuseppe himself was born in Rome.
Giuseppe Cesari was born in Arpino, Italy in February 1568. His father had been a native of Arpino, but Giuseppe himself was born in Rome.
Giuseppe Cesari is stigmatized by Lanzi as not less the corrupter of taste in painting than Marino was in poetry; indeed, another of the nicknames of Cesari is " II Marino de' Pittori " (the pictorial Marino). There was spirit in Cesari's heads of men and horses, and his frescoes in the Capitol (story of Romulus and Remus, &c. ), which occupied him at intervals during forty years, are well coloured; but he drew the human form ill. His perspective is faulty, his extremities monotonous, and his chiaroscuro defective. He died in 1640, at the age of seventy- two, or perhaps of eighty, at Rome. Cesari ranks as the head of the " Idealists " of his period, as opposed to the " Naturalists, " of whom Michelangelo da Caravaggio was the leading champion, -the so-called " idealism " consisting more in reckless facility, and disregard of the common facts and common-sense of nature, than in anything to which so lofty a name could be properly accorded.
Giuseppe Cesari painted a lot of paintings and was known at the time of the first among the Roman painters. He was the chief of the studio in which Caravaggio trained.
Giuseppe Cesari was a man of touchy and irascible character, and rose from penury to the height of opulence.
His brother Bernardino assisted in many of his works.