Marco Calderini was an Italian painter and art critic, born in Turin on August 23, 1850. He is best known for his landscape paintings that reflect the 19th-century Italian tradition. Calderini studied at the Accademia Albertina in Turin and was a pupil of the landscape painter Carlo Pittara, who was a prominent figure in the Scuola di Rivara, a group focused on plein air painting.
Calderini's work was influenced by the Barbizon school and he often depicted the Piedmontese and Ligurian countryside. His paintings usually capture the delicate interplay of light and shade, and he was particularly attentive to the atmospheric conditions of the environment he was painting.
Throughout his career, Calderini exhibited at various important exhibitions, including the Promotrice di Torino and the Venice Biennale. His artwork was well-received by critics and collected by art enthusiasts during his lifetime. Alongside his painting career, Calderini also wrote art criticism and essays, contributing to the dialogue on art in Italy during his time.
Marco Calderini also had a significant impact on the next generation of artists as a professor at the Accademia Albertina, where he taught from 1891 until his retirement. Among his students were several who would go on to have successful artistic careers of their own.
He died in Turin on February 4, 1941. Today, Calderini's works can be found in various Italian museums and galleries, and he is remembered as a key figure in the development of Italian landscape painting in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.