Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
The Italian painter, lithographer and writer Marco Calderini was a student at the Albertina Academy of Enrico Gamba, del Gastaldi and Antonio Fontanesi, whose style was inspired in the first works, moving away later towards a much more accentuated realistic research. He began his career in 1870 with The banks of the Po in Turin, which is one of the most remarkable works placed in the Turin Civic Museum. In the same year, he created the painting The Solitary Statues, in the National Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art in Rome, which was followed by many other paintings of dazzling views of Piedmont. In 1899, he participated in the III International Art Exhibition in Venice. Among his writings, The posthumous memories of Francesco Mosso (1885) and Antonio Fontanesi: landscape painter (1901).
1880s Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1960s Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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19th Century Post-Impressionist Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1990s Contemporary Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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Mid-20th Century Ashcan School Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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Mid-20th Century Ashcan School Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1930s Ashcan School Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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Mid-20th Century Ashcan School Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1970s American Modern Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1950s American Modern Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1920s American Modern Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1970s Surrealist Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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1920s Art Nouveau Marco Calderini Landscape Prints
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