| Squarcione,
Francesco (b. 1397, Padova, d. 1468, Padova) |
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Italian painter, active
in Padua. He is an enigmatic figure, who is important in terms of the
pupils he trained, rather than for his own work. A Paduan writer of 1560
patriotically described him as a famous and benevolent master, with many
pupils (according to Vasari, he trained 137) and a large collection of
antique sculpture gathered on youthful journeys through Greece and Italy.
More recent research, however, gives a picture of a tailor who, turning
painter in his middle thirties, was for many years discreditably involved
in a series of lawsuits with pupils, who resentful of his exploitation
of their talents, had broken their apprenticeships with him (Mantegna
was the most famous litigants). No traces of his collection remain, but
it is likely that something of the antiquarian erudition of the university
town of Padua rubbed off on the young men who spent time in his workshop.
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