Menu Shopping cart
Your basket is empty.
Support us
PISAVA
VELIKOST

CTRL+ ZA POVEČAVO
CTRL- ZA POMANJŠAVO

VELIKE/MALE
STIL
European Paintings

Pier Francesco Mola - 19th and 20th Century Painters

(Ticino, 1612 – Rome, 1666)

Born 1612 in Coldrerio in the Ticino, died 1666 in Rome. He was the son of the architect Giovanni Battista, with whom he moved to Rome when he was four. His teachers were Prospero Orsi and Giuseppe Cesari, called Cavalier d’Arpino. Between 1633 and 1647 he went to northern Italy. In Bologna he worked for two years in the workshop of Francesco Albani, in Venice he came under the influence of Titian, Veronese and the Bassanos. In 1641 he painted in the Oratorio del Carmine in his native town and returned to Rome in 1647, where he received commissions from members of the Roman families of Pamphilj, Chigi and Costaguti, from Cardinal Omodei and others. In 1662 he became head of the Accademia di San Luca. In 1656 he secured a commission for the frescoes in the Quirinal Palace through the intercession of Pietro da Cortona. Mola’s work ranges from commissions for large canvases to small paintings, which are characteristic of him and include biblical, mythological, poetic and allegorical motifs. These are depictions of landscapes into which he set small figures of saints and hermits. Mola’s work was already appreciated during his lifetime, especially in Paris and at the French court, which was about to appoint him court painter when death overtook him.

Lit.: Pier Francesco Mola: 1612-1666, Milano 1989 [ex. cat., Lugano, Museo Cantonale d'Arte; Roma, Musei Capitolini]; Seicento, Vol. I-II, Milano 1989, (biogr. Laura Laureati).
OwnerBirth - death
Joseph Abel (Aschach, 1764 – Vienna, 1818)
Francesco Albotto (Venice, 1721–1757)
Joannes Almenak (Antwerpen ?, ca 1640/45 – after 1684)
Martino Altomonte (Naples, 1657 – Vienna, 1745)
Antonius Angermeyer -
Anonymous -
Giovanni Baglione (Rome, 1566–1644)
Marcantonio Bassetti (Verona, 1586–1630)
Fortunat Bergant (Mekinje, Kamnik, 1721 − Ljubljana, 1769)
Franc Berneker (Gradišče, Slovenj Gradec, 1874 − Ljubljana, 1932)
Giovanni Carlo Bevilacqua (Venice, 1775–1849)
Gvidon Birolla (Trieste, 1881 − Ljubljana, 1963)
Pieter Bolcman (Antwerp?, c. 1640 – ?)
Peter Breithut (Krems, 1869 − Mannheim, 1930)
Antonio Calza (Verona, 1653–1725)
Anton Cebej (Ajdovščina, 1722 – ?, after 1774)
Andrea Celesti (Venice, 1637 – Toscolano, c. 1712?)
Giovanni Crivelli (Milan, c. 1690 – Parma, 1760?)
Gaetano Cusati (? – Naples, 1720)
Ladislao de Gauss (Budapest, 1901 – Trieste, 1970)
Robert de Longe (Brussels, 1646 – Piacenza, 1709)
Cornelis de Wael (Antwerp, 1592 – Rome, 1667)
Embriachi -
Franz Ignaz Josef Flurer (Augsburg, 1688 – Graz, 1742)
Luca Forte (Naples, 1600/1605 − before 1670)
Lorenzo Gennari (Cento, 1595 – Rimini?, c. 1665/1672)
Josip Germ (Adlešiči, 1869 − Novo mesto, 1950)
Matteo Ghidoni (Padua?, c. 1626 – Padua, 1689)
Nicola Grassi (Formeaso di Zuglio, 1682 − Venice, 1748)
Ivan Grohar (Sorica, 1867 − Ljubljana, 1911)
Johann Josef Karl Henrici (Schweidnitz, 1737 – Bozen, 1823)
Andrej Janez Herrlein (Kleinbarsdorf, 1738 – Ljubljana, 1817)
Rihard Jakopič (Ljubljana, 1869–1943)
Matija Jama (Ljubljana, 1872–1947)
Abraham Janssens (Antwerp, 1573/1575–1632)
Krištof Andrej Jelovšek (Ljubljana, 1729−1770)
Jacob Jordaens (Antwerp, 1593–1678)
Jean Jouvenet (Rouen, 1644 – Paris, 1717)
Anton Karinger (Ljubljana, 1829–1870)
Franc Kavčič/Caucig (Gorizia, 1755 – Vienna, 1828)
Ivo Kerdić (Davor, 1881 − Zagreb, 1953)
Fran Klemenčič (Ljubljana, 1880−1961)
Ivana Kobilca (Ljubljana, 1861–1926)
Matevž Langus (Kamna Gorica, 1792 – Ljubljana, 1855)
Godfried Maes (Antwerp, 1649–1700)
Francesco Malacrea (Trieste, 1813–1886)
Master Janez (?) -
Master of Trboje Madonna -
Valentin Metzinger (Saint−Avold, 1699 − Ljubljana, 1759)
Celestin Mis (Hostokreja, Bohemia, 1863 − Ljubljana, 1918)
Pier Francesco Mola (Ticino, 1612 – Rome, 1666)
Monogrammist MCL -
Pieter Mulier (Haarlem, 1637 – Milan, 1701)
Zoran Mušič (Bukovica near Gorizia, 1909 – Venice, 2005)
Pietro Navarra -
Giuseppe Nogari (Venice, 1699–1763)
Antonio Paroli (Gorizia, 1688–1768)
Marko Pernhart (Mieger bei Völkermarkt, 1824 − Klagenfurt, 1871)
Svetoslav Peruzzi (Lipe, 1881 − Split, 1936)
Jožef Petkovšek (Verd, 1861 − Studenec, Ljubljana, 1898)
Elda Piščanec (Trieste, 1897 − Vine, Vojnik, 1967)
Mihael Pogačnik (active 1st half 18th cent.)
Ivan Povirek (Križevska vas, Moravče, 1892 − Moravče, 1920)
Giuseppe Recco (Naples, 1634 – Alicante, 1695)
Alojzij Repič (Vrhpolje, 1866 – Ljubljana, 1941)
Johann Melchior Roos (Heidelberg, 1663 – Frankfurt, 1731)
Johann Michael Rottmayr (Laufen, 1654 – Vienna, 1730)
Franz Schams (Vienna, 1824–1883)
Martin Johann Schmidt (Grafenwörth, 1718 − Stein an der Donau, 1801)
Gerard Seghers (Antwerp, 1591–1651)
Georg Johann Seitz (Nuremberg?, 1810 − Vienna, 1870)
Gino Severini (Cortona, 1883 – Paris, 1966)
Matej Sternen (Verd, 1870 – Ljubljana, 1949)
Sebastian Stoskopff (Strasbourg, 1597 – Taunus, 1657)
Mihael Stroj (Ljubno, Radovljica, 1803 – Ljubljana, 1871)
Henrika Šantel (Gorizia, 1874 – Ljubljana, 1940)
Janez Šubic (Poljane nad Škofjo Loko, 1850 – Kaiserlautern, 1889)
Jurij Šubic (Poljane nad Škofjo Loko, 1855 – Leipzig, 1890)
Tertulliano Tarroni (Bologna, 1711 – ?, after 1784)
Jožef Tominc (Gorizia, 1790 – Gradišče nad Prvačino, 1866)
Jacob van Kerckhoven (Antwerp, c. 1637 – Venice, after 1712)
Gillis van Valckenborch (Antwerpen, c. 1570 – Frankfurt, 1622)
Ivan Vavpotič (Kamnik, 1877 – Ljubljana, 1943)
Herman Verelst The Hague, 1641/1642 − London, 1702)
Helena Vurnik (Vienna, 1882 − Radovljica, 1962)
Ferdinand Wagner Jr. (Passau, 1847 – Munich, 1927)
Ivan Zajec (Ljubljana, 1869−1952)
Ivan Žabota (Podgradje, Ljutomer, 1877 − Bratislava, 1939)
Peter Žmitek (Kropa, 1874 − Ljubljana, 1935)