Giulio Campi (1502 – 5 March 1572) was an Italian painter and architect. His brothers Vincenzo Campi and Antonio Campi were also renowned painters.
In 1522, in Mantua, he studied painting, architecture, and modelling under Giulio Romano. He visited Rome, became an ardent student of the antique, and like Bernardino Campi — distantly related to him — he combined a Lombard and Roman traditions. He collaborated on some works with Camillo Boccaccino, the son of Boccaccio Boccaccino, with whom Campi may also have received training.
He died in Cremona in 1572.
When he was twenty-seven, Giulio executed a Virgin and Child with Sts Celsus and Nazarus for the church of Sant'Abondio. This painting is regarded as his masterpiece; the Catholic Encyclopedia praises it as "masterly in the freedom of its drawing and in the splendour of its color."
Many of his fresco works are housed in churches of Cremona, Mantua, Milan and in the church of Saint Margaret's, in his native town. These include:
He was involved in the reconstruction and decoration of the church of Santa Rita in Cremona. An altar-piece in San Sigismondo and his Labours of Hercules were engraved by Giorgio Ghisi.
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