Antonio Palomino was born to a respectable family at
Bujalance, near
Córdoba in 1655. He studied
philosophy,
theology and law at Córdoba, and had lessons in painting from
Juan de Valdés Leal, who visited there in 1672, and afterwards from
Juan de Alfaro y Gamez in 1675. After taking
minor orders Palomino moved to
Madrid in 1678, where he associated with Alfaro,
Claudio Coello, and
Juan Carreño de Miranda, and executed some indifferent
frescoes. He soon afterwards married a lady of rank, and, having been appointed
alcalde of the
mesta, was himself ennobled; in 1688 he was appointed painter to
King Charles II.The artist visited
Valencia in 1697 and remained there for three or four years, devoted to painting the ceilings of the
Church of Santos Juanes and the
Basilica of Our Lady of the Forsaken. Between 1705 and 1715 he spent considerable amounts of time in
Salamanca,
Granada and Córdoba; in the latter year the first volume of his work on art,
El Museo pictórico y escala óptica, appeared in Madrid. He painted the ceiling fresco in the dome of the sacristy of the
Cartuja de Granada. After the death of his wife in 1725 Palomino took priest's orders. He died on 13 August 1726. ==
El Museo pictórico y escala óptica==