According to Lanzi he made his own manner of painting, that is, he resented the Maratta and the Carracci school, with some echoes from Correggio.
In Canelli, there are two canvases, Death of St Joseph and an Immaculate Conception located in the parish church of San Tommaso.
Two from Sant’Anastasio, Asti (demolished in 1907) are conserved in the town's civic art gallery in Palazzo Mazzetti: Tobias and the Angel, and Healing of the Paralyzed.
[2] His works are also found in Santa Caterina, Casale Monferrato; San Martino, La Morra; and Sant'Agostino, Cherasco.
He had two sons: Carlo Filippo, born in Asti, who died after 1776, civil architect and theater designer, and Giuseppe Amedeo, known as Abate Aliberti, born in Asti around 1710, who died in 1772, a painter, also known by the name of Gian Giacomo.