13 facts about Antonie Sminck Pitloo

Antonie or Anton Sminck Pitloo (21 April or 8 May 1790 in Arnhem – 22 June 1837 in Naples) was a Dutch painter. His surname was originally Pitlo, but he supplementary the extra “o” because he was often mistaken for an Italian while resident in Italy. In Italian he is afterward known as Antonio van Pitloo.

Pitloo started studying painting first at Paris and next at Rome, where there was already an international artistic colony, in 1811. He took advantage of a scholarship offered by Louis Bonaparte, the King of Holland. In 1815, after the fall of Bonaparte, the scholarship payments ceased. He was next invited to Naples by the Russian diplomat and art connoisseur Count Grigory Vladimirovich Orloff (1777 – 22 June 1826). In 1816, Pitloo won, in a public competition, the name of professor of landscape at the Neapolitan Academy. Lord Napier lauded him as a landscape painter:

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In 1820 he married Giulia Mori and suitably became a citizen of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. He became a lecturer at the Art Institute of Art at Naples where he specialized in pastoral painting.

Around 1826 he was vivacious in Vicoletto del Vasto 15, with Carl Götzloff, Giacinto Gigante and Teodoro Duclere. Gabriele Smargiassi was his pupil and successor at the Academy. Another pupil was Vincenzo Franceschini.

He remained in Naples until his death during a cholera epidemic. He was buried in the English Cemetery there.

He was considered a leading exponent of the “Posillipo School” of painting, named to the area where he lived in Naples. His paintings have been compared to precursors of Impressionism, some sixty years previously this was invented.

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