Mateo Cerezo, sometimes referred to as The Younger (19 April 1637, Burgos – 29 June 1666, Madrid) was a Spanish Baroque painter; known primarily for religious works and still-lifes.
Life and works
His father was the painter, Mateo Cerezo Muñoz (c.1610-1670, sometimes referred to as The Elder), and Isabel Delgado, the daughter of a well-known goldsmith.[1] After receiving his initial training from his father, he went to Madrid, where he studied with Juan Carreño de Miranda, becoming one his most promising students. He was also employed in Carreño's workshops.
He was married in 1664, and died two years later, as the result of an unspecified serious illness. Despite his early death, he left a relatively large body of works; many of which may be seen at the Museo del Prado.
^ abJosé Buendía & Ismael Gutiérrez Pastor: Vida y obra del pintor Mateo Cerezo (1637-1666). Burgos: Diputación Provincial de Burgos, 1986 ISBN978-84-505-3905-9
^Alonso E. Pérez Sánchez: Pintura barroca en España 1600-1750. Madrid : Ediciones Cátedra, 1992 ISBN978-84-376-2684-0
Further reading
Elias Tormo, Mateo Cerezo, Archivo Español de Arte y Arqueología (Spanish Art and Archaeological Archives). 3. 1927, pgs. 113 ff., 245 ff.