Career
Pagani moved to Venice in 1667, where he made a series of ten aquatints from works by Giuseppe Diamantini (1621-1705). In 1675 he painted the Martyrdom of Saint Erasmus. The painting was exhibited at Palazzo Molin and is currently located in the National Gallery of Spinola in Genoa.
In 1690 he was invited to Vienna by the Emperor Leopold I.
In 1696 he returned to Valsolda where he frescoed what is considered his masterwork: the nave of the parish church of San Martino.
The work, completed the year of the birth of Tiepolo, who would master the art of the luminous fresco, astounds with the use of bright colors and swirling sotto in su perspective as a fresco technique. Michela Catalano in an entry in Lombardia Beni Culturali website states:
The result is an extraordinary invention of illusionistic perspective, consisting of two quadratura domes connected by transverse arches, framing a complex composition, in which different iconographic themes, in turn, connect the (painted narratives) of lives of the saints to their respective side chapels.
(In the center of the second dome) is depicted the Assumption of the Virgin. (To its side, is depicted).
The fantastic, dizzying rush of the vault.. is a veritable compendium of the experiences drawn from the figurative painters in Venice and Central Europe, from research on chiaroscuro and naturalistic styles of the Venetian tenebrosi artists, and impacted by the Baroque of Rubens, a reflection on models of Michelangelo, Tintoretto and other mannerists, supplemented by a precocious adoption of the illusionistic perspective methods of Andrea Pozzo.
Pagani died in Milan on 5 May 1716. His former house in Valsolda has been converted in a museum dedicated to his work in 2004.