Augusto Bompiani (September 11, 1852 – May 9, 1930) was an Italian painter, mainly of landscapes including figures, in both oil and watercolors.
Augusto trained at the Accademia di San Luca in Rome, and later became a teacher there.
[1] At the 1880 exposition of Turin, he submitted a painting titled Fra una messa.
At 1883 in the Exposition at Rome he displayed Intima e Due, a vedute of the port of Anzio.
[2] In 1904, he collaborated with Onorato Carlandi, E. Ferrari, and Alessandro Battaglia in illustrating an album donated to the visiting president of France, Loubet.