Bernardo Bitti

Democrito Bernardo Bitti
Born1548
Camerino, Italy
Died1610 (aged 61–62)
Lima, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire
NationalityItalian
Known forPainting
Notable work
  • Coronation of the Virgin
  • The Virgin of the Candelaria
  • Immaculate Conception
  • Agony in the Garden
StyleMannerism

Democrito Bernardo Bitti SJ (1548–1610) was an Italian Jesuit priest and painter. He introduced Mannerism to Peru, where he went on a Jesuit mission after having studied in Rome. On his way to Peru, Bitti traveled through Spain, where he became influenced by Sevillian painting, especially that of Luis de Morales. Bitti arrived in Peru in 1575 and started painting for churches first in Lima and from 1583 in Cusco. His works in Lima include the typically Mannerist Coronation of the Virgin and The Virgin of the Candelaria for St. Peter's Church. The Immaculate Conception was a recurring theme in his paintings, one of which is in the Basilica of La Merced in Cusco. In addition to Mannerism, his works reflect ideas of the Counter-Reformation and religious education of the natives. After 1584, Bitti traveled all over South America, painting where he went. His mobile lifestyle was a testament to his popularity with the Jesuits, but it led to Bitti's being unable to set up a workshop or have apprentices. Nevertheless, his influence in the region was immense,[1] and resulted in Mannerism persisting in South America even when it had fallen out of favor in Europe. Bitti is regarded as the founder of the Cusco School of painting.

  1. ^ Irwin 2018, p. 372.