Portraits by Italian Painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo

Italian painter

 In the middle of the sixteenth century Arcimboldo made a normal debut with  works including designs for windows and tapestries in Milan and Monza cathedrals and frescos for the cathedral of Como (Italy).
In 1562 he was invited to the Imperial court in Prague immediately his original and grotesque fantasy appeared.
He invented a portrait type consisting of painted animals, flowers, fruit, and objects composed to form a human appearance.
Some consider him the forerunner of Surrealism in the 20th century, but his context is at the end of the Renaissance.
This was a time when people (collectors and scientists) were starting to give more attention to nature.
Arcimboldo created in the court of Prague, costumes, set designs, and decorations.

Emperor Rudolf II asked him to find and buy works of art and natural curiosities, as well as giving him numerous commands for paintings. 

The cOOk, 1570


The Vegetable Gardener, 1587-1590


Reversible Head with Basket of FrUit
1590


Flora, 1591


Vertumnus, 1590

Four Seasons in One Head, 1590

The Librarian, 1566

The Waiter, 1574

Air, 1566

Water, 1566

Earth, 1566