Online Encyclopedia

DOMINGO SEQUEIRA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 659 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DOMINGO

SEQUEIRA  ANTONIOr DE (1768-r837), Portuguese painter, was born at Lisbon in 1768, and studied
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art first at the academy of Lisbon, and subsequently under A . Cavallucci in Rome . By the age of thirteen he had evinced such marked talent that F. de Setubal employed him as assistant in his
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work for the Joao Ferreiras Palace . Sequeira sojourned in Rome from 1788 to 1794, when he was made honorary member of the Academy of St Luke . After another two years' travel and study in Italy, he returned to his native country preceded by so
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great a reputation that important commissions for churches and palaces were immediately entrusted to him—scriptural subjects, large
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historical compositions and
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cabinet pictures . In 1802 he was appointed first court painter, in which capacity he executed many
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works for the prince regent, for Donna Maria Teresa, and for the members of the court . He designed the valuable
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silver service which was presented by the Portuguese nation to Wellington, and a monument that was erected in 182o in the Rocio square at Lisbon . In 1823 he visited Paris, where he is known to have tried his skill in lithography and etching . The last years of his
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life he spent in Rome, devoting himself chiefly to devotional subjects and to his duties as head of the Portuguese Academy . He died in Rome in 1837 . His best-known pictures are the " Last Moments of the Poet Camoens," "
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Flight into
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Egypt," " Ugolino," the " St Bruno " at the Lisbon Academy, and the "Descent from the
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Cross." Numerous paintings by Sequeira are in the royal palace at
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Mafra, the convent of Laveinas, the new palace of Ajuda, and in the
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principal palaces and churches of Lisbon .

End of Article: DOMINGO SEQUEIRA
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