{{short description|Italian painter}}
{{short description|Italian painter}}
[[File:Domenico parodi, autoritratto, 1700-10 ca.jpg|thumb|right|”Self-portrait”, {{circa|1700-10}}, Florence, [[Uffizi]]]]
[[File:Domenico parodi, autoritratto, 1700-10 ca.jpg|thumb|right|”Self-portrait”, {{circa|}}, Florence, [[Uffizi]]]]
”’Domenico Parodi”’ (1672 – 19 December 1742, in [[Genoa]]) was an Italian painter, sculptor, and architect, of the late[[Baroque]]. He was the son of the famous Genoese sculptor [[Filippo Parodi]] and the elder brother of the Baroque painter [[Giovanni Battista Parodi]] (1674-1730)
”’Domenico Parodi”’ (1672 – 19 December 1742) was an Italian painter, sculptor, and architect, of the late[[Baroque]]. He was the son of the famous Genoese sculptor [[Filippo Parodi]] and the elder brother of the Baroque painter [[Giovanni Battista Parodi]] ()
==Biography==
==Biography==
Domenico was initially apprenticed in Venice under [[Sebastiano Bombelli]]. In the early 1690s, he worked in the studios of [[Carlo Maratta]], and later under Maratta’s pupil, [[Paolo Girolamo Piola]]. His designs combined elements from Castiglione, the [[Carracci]], Maratta, [[Pietro da Cortona|Cortona]], [[Gian Lorenzo Bernini|Bernini]] and [[Luca Giordano|Giordano]] and were in turn important for the compositions of [[Francesco Campora]] and [[Giovanni Agostino Ratti]]. Among his pupils were [[Nicolò Malatto]],<ref>{{cite book
Domenico was initially apprenticed in Venice under [[Sebastiano Bombelli]]. In the early 1690s, he worked in the studios of [[Carlo Maratta]], and later under Maratta’s pupil, [[Paolo Girolamo Piola]]. His designs combined elements from Castiglione, the [[Carracci]], Maratta, [[Pietro da Cortona|Cortona]], [[Gian Lorenzo Bernini|Bernini]] and [[Luca Giordano|Giordano]] and were in turn important for the compositions of [[Francesco Campora]] and [[Giovanni Agostino Ratti]]. Among his pupils were [[Nicolò Malatto]],<ref>{{cite book
|last1 = Casalis
|last1 = Casalis
|first1 = Goffredo
|first1 = Goffredo
|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=OQhTAAAAcAAJ
|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=OQhTAAAAcAAJ
}}</ref> [[Angiolo Rossi]], [[Batista Parodi]] (his brother); and son Domenico. Domenico Junior resided in Lisbon, and was a celebrated portrait painter in his day. Another pupil, briefly, was [[Francesco Campora]]. He frescoed a hall in the Palazzo Negroni.<ref>{{cite book| first=Luigi| last=Lanzi| year=1847| title=History of Painting in Italy; From the Period of the Revival of the Fine Arts to the End of the Eighteenth Century|volume=III|translator=[[Thomas Roscoe]] | page=280| publisher= Henry G. Bohn|location=London |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k0sGAAAAQAAJ| author-link=Luigi Lanzi}}</ref>
}}</ref> [[Angiolo Rossi]], [[Batista Parodi]] (his brother); and son Domenico. Domenico Junior resided in Lisbon, and was a celebrated portrait painter in his day. Another pupil, briefly, was [[Francesco Campora]]. He frescoed a hall in the Palazzo Negroni.<ref>{{cite book| first=Luigi| last=Lanzi| year=1847| title=History of Painting in Italy; From the Period of the Revival of the Fine Arts to the End of the Eighteenth Century|volume=III|translator=[[Thomas Roscoe]] | page=280| publisher= Henry G. Bohn|location=London |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=k0sGAAAAQAAJ| author-link=Luigi Lanzi}}</ref>
Parodi died in Genoa in 1742.
==References==
==References==
Italian painter

Domenico Parodi (1672 – 19 December 1742) was an Italian painter, sculptor, and architect, of the late Baroque. He was the son of the famous Genoese sculptor Filippo Parodi and the elder brother of the Baroque painter Giovanni Battista Parodi (1674–1730)
Domenico was initially apprenticed in Venice under Sebastiano Bombelli. In the early 1690s, he worked in the studios of Carlo Maratta, and later under Maratta’s pupil, Paolo Girolamo Piola. His designs combined elements from Castiglione, the Carracci, Maratta, Cortona, Bernini and Giordano and were in turn important for the compositions of Francesco Campora and Giovanni Agostino Ratti. Among his pupils were Nicolò Malatto,[1] Angiolo Rossi, Batista Parodi (his brother); and son Domenico. Domenico Junior resided in Lisbon, and was a celebrated portrait painter in his day. Another pupil, briefly, was Francesco Campora. He frescoed a hall in the Palazzo Negroni.[2]
Parodi died in Genoa in 1742.
- Soldani, Silvana (1967). “Profilo di Domenico Parodi”. Critica d’Arte (in Italian). 14 (87): 60–70.
- Franchini Guelfi, Fausta (1988). “Domenico Parodi e Francesco Biggi”. La scultura a Genova e in Liguria dal Seicento al primo Novecento (in Italian). Genoa: Carige. pp. 280–1.



