He specialized in imaginary landscapes (capricci) also called paesaggios or veduta (landscapes) with architecture and figures.
He studied first under Giovanni Domenico Brugieri and Giovanni Domenico Lombardi, the former pupil of Maratta and the latter of Marracci.
Subsequently he moved on to study quadratura with Ferdinando Galli Bibiena in Bologna, and figure painting with Vittorio Bigari.
[2] In 1759, he decorated the apartment of the Gonfaloniere in the Palazzo della Signoria in Lucca.
This article about an Italian painter born in the 18th century is a stub.