Collino [Collini], Italian family of sculptors. Ignazio Collino (1724-1793) and his brother Filippo Collino (1737-1801) worked together on many occasions, so that most of their output cannot be definitely attributed to one or the other. Ignazio was first taught drawing by Claudio Francesco Beaumont and sculpture by François Ladatte. In 1748 he went to study sculpture under Giovanni Battista Maini in Rome, where Filippo joined him in 1754. The brothers' earliest works are copies from the Antique. Two marble profile portraits in low relief of Alexander the Great and Alexander's mother Olympia (both 1754, Palazzo Reale), which presage the Neo-classical style, are known to be by Filippo. The Collino brothers directed the schooling of sculptors in Turin from 1767. Like most of the sculpture provided for the House of Savoy, those for the royal foundation, the Superga, sited on a hill to the east of Turin, were the product of the Collino brothers. //
Category | Artists |
Artists by letter | C |
Artist nationality | Italian |