Bernardo Strozzi. Bernardo Strozzi, named il Cappuccino and il Prete Genovese was an Italian Baroque painter and engraver.
   A canvas and fresco artist, his wide subject range included history, allegorical, genre and portrait paintings as well as still lifes. Born and initially mainly active in Genoa, he worked in Venice in the latter part of his career.
   His work exercised considerable influence on artistic developments in both cities. He is considered a principal founder of the Venetian Baroque style.
   His powerful art stands out by its rich and glowing colour and broad, energetic brushstrokes. Strozzi was born in Genoa.
   He is not believed to be related to the Florentine Strozzi family. Bernardo Strozzi initially trained in the workshop of Cesare Corte, a minor Genoese painter whose work reflected the late Mannerist style of Luca Cambiaso. He subsequently joined the workshop of Pietro Sorri, an innovative Sienese painter residing in Genoa from 1596 to 1598. Sorri is credited with leading Strozzi away from the artificial elegance of Cambiaso's late Mannerist style towards a greater naturalism. In 1598, at the age of 17, Strozzi joined a Capuchin monastery, a reformist offshoot of the Franciscan order. During this time he likely painted devotional compositions for the order, including many scenes with St. Francis of Assisi whose life and deeds formed the inspiration of the order. While a monk of the
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