Juan Martín Cabezalero

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File:Cabez3.jpg
Pasaje de la Vida de San Francisco, 1670, Prado Museum

Juan Martín Cabezalero (1633–1673) was a Spanish draftsman and painter. Born in Almadén, he studied under Juan Carreño de Miranda, court painter to Charles II of Spain; Cabezalero lived at Carreño de Miranda's house until 1666.[1] Both he and Carreño were influenced by Van Dyck.[2]

Few works by Cabezalero have survived.[3] His surviving works include his St Jerome (1666, Meadows Museum, Southern Methodist University, Dallas) and the Assumption of the Virgin (ca. 1670; Madrid, Prado).[4] The latter had been formerly attributed to Mateo Cerezo, also a pupil of Carreño de Miranda.[5]

Antonio Palomino praises Cabezalero's modest, studious nature and laments that he died young.[6]

References

External links

  • Jusepe de Ribera, 1591-1652, a full text exhibition catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, which includes material on Juan Martín Cabezalero (see index)


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