Gennaro Calì (c. 1799–1877) was an Italian sculptor.
Biography
He was born and died in Naples. He was born in a family of artists. His brother Andrea was also a sculptor. He studied initially at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of Naples, then moved to Rome, where he worked under the Neoclassical sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen, and also encountered Antonio Canova. Returning to Naples, he helped decorate the entrance stairway to the Royal Palace. He also helped complete the gilded stucco decoration of the throne room of the Royal Palace of Caserta.
In Naples, he also sculpted the statue of San Giovanni Crisostomo for the church of San Francesco di Paola, a Pietà for the main altar for the church of the Camposanto, and L’Addolorata now in the Museo di Capodimonte.[1]
An article in 1856 Journal of Il Poligrafo, describes him as the prince of Neapolitan sculptors[2] In 1822, along with Tito Angelini, he won an award for sculpture from the Institute of Fine Arts of Naples.[3] In 1835, he is described as an honorary professor at the Royal Institute of Fine Arts in Naples.[4]
Among his pupils was Uriele Vitolo.
References
- ↑ Guide for Caserta from ARTE.it (2016), with the collaboration of the Soprintendenza per i beni architettonici paesaggisticistorici artistici ed etnoantropologici of the province of Caserta and Benevento.
- ↑ Il Poligrafo, Volume 1, page 202.
- ↑ Giornale del Regno delle Due Sicilie, Volume 2, page 88.
- ↑ Real Museo Borbonico; Biblioteca Palatina (1835). Catalogo delle opere di belle arti esposte nel palagio del Real Museo Borbonico il di 30 maggio 1835. dalla Stamperia Reale. Retrieved 2016-12-20.