Giuseppe Drugman

Giuseppe Drugman (27 April 1810 – 1 October 1846) was an Italian landscape and cityscape painter.

He attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Parma, where he studied with the landscape painter, Giuseppe Boccaccio.

[2] During the uprisings of 1831, he and his brother Massimo were suspected of belonging to the Carbonari, but were eventually cleared.

[3] He went to Rome in 1837 and began sending his canvases home; notably scenes of Tiber Island and the Colosseum, done in a style reminiscent of Claude Lorrain.

[2] In 1841, he was especially busy with commissions, doing canvases of the Ducal Palace of Colorno,[4] as well as other vedute of Parma, including: In 1844 he, Luca Gandaglia (c.1780–c.1850) and Giuseppe Giorgi were engaged to paint scenes from the operas I Lombardi and Maria di Rohan at the Teatro Regio.

Self-portrait (c.1830)
Tiber Island