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LUCA See also: born at Moneglia in the Genoese See also: state, the son of a painter named Giovanni See also: Cambiasi
.
He took to See also: drawing at a very early age, imitating his See also: father, and See also: developed See also: great aptitude for foreshortening
.
At the age of fif teen he painted, along with his father, some subjects from Ovid's Metamorphoses on the front of a See also: house in Genoa, and afterwards, in conjunction with See also: Marcantonio See also: Calvi, a ceiling showing great daring of execution in the Palazzo See also: Doria
.
He also formed an early friend-See also: ship with Giambattista See also: Castello; both artists painted together, with so much similarity of See also: style that their See also: works could hardly be told apart; from this friend Cambiasi learned much in the way of perspective and architecture
.
Luchetto's best See also: artistic See also: period lasted for twelve years after his first successes; from that See also: time he declined in power, though not at once in reputation, owing to the agitations and vexations brought upon him by a passion which he conceived for his See also: sister-in-See also: law
.
His wife having died, and the sister-in-law having taken See also: charge of his house and See also: children, he endeavoured to procure a papal See also: dispensation for marrying her; but in this he was disappointed
.
In 1583 he accepted an invitation from See also: Philip II. to continue in the
See also: Escorial a series of frescoes which had been begun by Castello, now deceased; and it is said that one See also: principal reason for his closing with this offer was that he hoped to bring the royal influence to bear upon the See also: pope, but in this again he failed
.
Worn out with his disquietudes, he died in the Escorial in the second See also: year of his sojourn
.
Cambiasi had an ardent fancy, and was a bold designer in a Raphaelesque mode
.
His extreme facility astonished the See also: Spanish painters; and it is said that Philip II., watching one See also: day with pleasure the offhand zest with.which Luchetto was See also: painting a See also: head of a laughing See also: child, was allowed the further surprise. of seeing the laugh changed, by a touch or two upon the lips, into a weeping expression
.
The artist painted sometimes with a See also: brush in each See also: hand, and with a certainty equalling or transcending that even of Tintoret
.
He made a vast number of drawings, and was also something of a sculptor, executing in this branch of See also: art a figure of Faith
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Altogether he ranks as one of the ablest artists of his day . In" See also: personal character, notwithstanding his executive energy, he is reported to have been timid and diffident
.
His son See also: Orazio became likewise a painter, studying under Luchetto
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The best works of Cambiasi are to be seen in Genoa
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In the See also: church of S
.
Giorgio—the martyrdom of that
See also: saint; in the Palazzo Imperiali Terralba, a Genoese suburb—a See also: fresco of the " Rape of the Sabines "; in S
.
Maria da Carignano—a " Pieta," containing his own portrait and (according to tradition) that of his beloved sister-in-law
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In the Escorial he executed several pictures; one is a See also: Paradise on the vaulting of the church, with a multitude of figures
.
For this picture he received '2,000 ducats, probably the largest sum that had, up to that time, ever been given for a single See also: work
.
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