Giulio Cirello

He mainly painted sacred subjects in a late-Baroque style,[2] though he was also valued as portraitist during his time.

[3] He painted an altarpiece for the church of San Giuseppe in Padua.

[4] He painted the walls of the Palazzo Vescovile or the Bishop's palace, adjacent to the Padua Cathedral; and two pieces for the church of La Rotonda in Rovigo.

[5][6] Along with the fellow Luca da Reggio pupil, Francesco Minorello, he painted two canvases, depicting St Agnes beaten by the Roman Prefect and St Martha as a Nun holding the cross sprays holy water on a Dragon, for the church of Sant'Agnese in Padua.

This article about an Italian painter born in the 18th century is a stub.

Glory of Giovanni Battista Foscarini (1678)