Toma painted a large canvas on the
Eruption of Vesuvius, also called
A Rain of Ashes (
La pioggia di cenere di Vesuvio), which was displayed at the Turin Exhibition and donated to the Academy of Florence. It documents a tradition that locals from the areas at the foot of the volcano, during minor eruptions, would parade an icon of
Saint Januarius and plead in prayer to be spared greater harm from an eruption. He also painted
La confessione.
Angelo de Gubernatis quotes a critic, remarking on the latter painting, who called Toma a painter of "...scenes of sacristy, convents, monks, schools, of scenes where the penumbra of the church choir enlivened by flashes of red light from candles and lamps; he is a master at gathering the ecclesiastical countenance in people and things, and of us getting us to gather the sense of the sacred place which spreads with the smell of incense and light governed by the large hanging lamps." While both works depict folk religious fervor, they highlight some of the more primitive and superstitious elements. Among other major works are
Man Tortured by Inquisition, exhibited at Paris;
Clemente VII che nasconde le gioie del Vaticano, exhibited at the Promotrice of Naples;
La guardia alla rota dei trovatelli, bought by the Ministry of Public Education;
Le orfane, awarded in Naples;
La messa in casa, acquired by the City of Naples; ''l'onomastico della maestra'', donated to the Academy of Naples. His master work
Luisa Sanfelice in carcere (Luisa Sanfelice in prison) is in the collection of the
Capodimonte Museum in Naples, reproduced in the
Illustrazione Italiana. This work depicts the former aristocrat in her jail cell in
Castel Sant’Elmo, stitching a dress for the child she was expecting. Her decapitation was carried out by order of the restored Bourbon king for supporting the
Parthenopean Republic of 1799. ==References==