He was born in
Udine on 14 or 15 October 1635 (baptised on the 15th), educated and trained under the guidance of his father Valentino and the godfather Girolamo Lugaro, he moved from a young age to
Venice where, after a period of specialization with
Guercino in
Bologna, he began his career studying the manner of
Paolo Veronese, quickly becoming one of his greatest connoisseurs. The synthesis of the techniques of
Cinquecento, of the impulse given by
naturalists and of the contemporary taste of the "tenebrosi" was addressed by Bombelli in the sector in which he specialized most, namely
portraiture. Not to underestimate his stay in
Florentine, during which he was able to appreciate the technique of
Sustermans. His first surviving work dates back to 1665, it is the
Portrait of Benedetto Mangilli (Civici Musei, Galleria d'Arte Antica, Udine), a painting that shows influences from
Bernardo Strozzi. Among the peculiar characteristics of his works emerge vitality, expressiveness and communicability, both in the portraits anchored to the tradition
Baroque like the
Polo Querini of 1684 (
Querini Stampalia Foundation, Venice) and in the most simplified ones. His characters emerge from the shadows, although described to the smallest detail, showy with their showy and festive attires. He was also the master of
Domenico and Giovanni Battista Parodi, sons of the Genoese sculptor
Filippo Parodi, a personal friend of the friulian painter; Bombelli's fame as a skilled portrait painter was known internationally, so much so that one of his pupils was
Johann Gottfried Tannauer, famous painter and miniaturist at the court of
Tsar Peter the Great of Russia. He was also very fond of friendship and affection with the fellow
Luca Carlevarijs and with the young and promising
Rosalba Carriera, of whom he painted an intense portrait on the occasion of his appointment to
Academia di San Luca. His portraiture style later also influenced other painters, including
Alessandro Longhi and
Niccolò Cassana. Bombelli had a half-brother, Raffaele, also a painter, less well known than Sebastiano and active in the Friuli area. His atelier in Venice was very famous and frequented by important personalities passing through Venice, in particular during
Carnival: on this occasion he portrayed the prince in 1692
Frederick of Denmark (future king Frederick IV). Sebastiano Bombelli was also an art expert: being the greatest connoisseur of Paolo Veronese, he was often contacted to verify the authenticity of works that surfaced on the market. Concurrently with this activity, Bombelli was also a restorer. Unfortunately, to give new brilliance to ancient artworks, he used paints and lacquers that - with the passing of time - oxidised, blackening the paint film. Various sources, contemporary and non-contemporary, refer to this information, in particular
Lanzi. His mastery of the use of colors, however, was much appreciated, to the extent that he was the dedicatee of the text ''Nuovo plico d'ogni sorte di tinture'' by Gallipido Tallier - published in 1704 - and the painter was addressed with these words «... knowing the world the virtue, which she generally possesses of coloring and painting; And I am going to say, that the opre of his penoron have a not that of celestial, which dazzles the sight to whom they aim ...». He was a member of the
fraglia pictorial of Venice from 1687 to 1700. and Girolamo Celotti, both
Servite friars. == References ==