Page:Cyclopedia of painters and paintings - Volume I.djvu/281

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Boulevards; Cathedral of Milan; Sta. Croce in Florence; Haven of Honfleur.—Wurzbach, ii. 249.


CANLASSI. See Cagnacci.



CANO, ALONSO, born in Granada, March 19, 1601, died there, Oct. 3, 1667. Spanish school. After his father, Miguel, removed to Seville, Alonso, by the advice of Juan del Castillo, studied sculpture under Montanes and painting under Pacheco; was painter, sculptor, and architect, whence sometimes called the Spanish Michelangelo. Noted for the manufacture of retablos or monumental altar-*pieces, of which all parts—the wood-carvings and statues as well as the paintings—were executed by himself. In 1637 he fled from Seville, in consequence of a duel with the painter Llano y Valdés, and went to Madrid, where, through the favour of Velasquez, his fellow-pupil under Pacheco, he obtained the protection of the Duke de Olivares and became painter to the king. In 1644 he was suspected of the murder of his wife, but on being put to the torture was declared innocent, though the suspicions against him were strong. In 1652 Philip IV. appointed him a canon in the cathedral at Granada, where he passed his last days in practising his art and in charitable deeds. Works: St. John Evangelist writing the Apocalypse, St. Benedict the Abbot, St. Jerome, Madonna in Adoration, Flagellation of Christ, Dead Christ and Angel, Gothic King on his Throne, and Two Gothic Kings, Madrid Museum; Crucifixion, Academy S. Fernando, Madrid; Madonna, Seville Cathedral (replica in Hermitage); Souls in Purgatory, Seville Museum; St. Agnes, Berlin Museum; St. Paul, Dresden Gallery; Madonna and St. Anthony, Munich Gallery; Dominican painting Portrait of St. Dominic; Madonna and Child; Child Jesus and little St. John; Portrait of himself and of a Knight of the Order of the Golden Spur, Hermitage, St. Petersburg.—Cean Bermudez; Stirling, ii. 779; Viardot, 65; Ch. Blanc, École espagnole; Madrazo, 359.



CANON, HANS (Johann von Straschiripka), born in Vienna, March 13, 1829, died there, Sept. 12, 1885. Genre, history and portrait painter; pupil of Waldmüller, then in 1848-55 cavalry officer in the Austrian army; after that devoted himself entirely to art; greatly influenced by Rahl. Travelled extensively in the East, France, and England, lived in 1860-69 in Carlsruhe, then in Stuttgart, and finally settled in Vienna, where he became professor at the Academy. Imitated the Venetian masters, especially Tintoretto and Titian; one of the best portrait painters of his time. Works: Fishermaiden (1858); Modern Judith (1860); Cromwell beside the Body of Charles I., Lodge of St. John (1873), Vienna Museum; Circuit of Life, Museum of Natural History, Vienna; Hans Sachs; Modern Diogenes; The Page; Fruit Girl; Treasure Digger; Lute Player; Bacchus Intoxicated; Bayadere; Butcher's Shop; Girl with Stereoscope; Flamingo Chase; Dealer in Arms; St. Benedict, Pope Leo the Great, Cassiodorus, Boethius, Male and Female Portrait (1883).—Brockhaus, iii. 912; Wurzbach, xxxix. 253; Kunst-*Chronik, xx. 734.


CANTARINI, SIMONE, born at Oropezza near Pesaro in 1612, died at Verona, Oct. 15, 1648. Bolognese school; called also Il Pesarese and Simone da Pesaro. Pupil of Giacomo Pandolfi, with whom he went to Venice; studied next with Claudio Ridolfi, and afterwards with Guido; exhibited great talent, but grew so vain and arrogant that