Italian painter
Ettore or Eduardo Ettore Forti was an Italian painter, who was prolific in depicting realistic Neo-Pompeian scenes of Ancient Roman life and events. These subjects were popular in the late-Victorian period, as exemplified by the popularity of Lawrence Alma-Tadema.[1]
There is little definitive information available about Forti's biography. His paintings are signed with his name and Rome. Different sources can not cite a place of birth or birth date, and do not agree about a birth date. Nothing is known of his training. Many sources claim he was active a few decades before and after 1900. He exhibited in Berlin between 1893 and 1897. He exhibited at the Mostra della Romana Società degli Amatori e Cultori in 1905.[2]
One favorite topic is a salesman displaying artwork, jewelry, or rugs to well-dressed female patrician women, often in elegant settings.
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Evening at the temple
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Feast of Centaurs
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Rug Merchant in Ancient Rome
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Chariots racing in the Circus Maximus
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Pompeii Street Scene
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The Bath (?)
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The Carpet Seller (1)
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The Carpet Seller (2)
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The Carpet seller (3)
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The Carpet seller (4)
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The Carpet Seller (5)
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Chariot Racing
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Racing Chariots Entering The Circus Maximus
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Road to Pompeii
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Steps(?)
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The Harpist(?)
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In A Jewelry Store
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Detail from a Pompeii Love Song
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In A Jewelry Store
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Pompeii Street
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Art Seller
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Fruit Vendor
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Hadrian returns from Tivoli
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In the Roman Palace
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Inside A Roman Villa
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Pompeii Love Song
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The Bedchamber(?)
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The Embarkment of a Roman Queen
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The Art Seller
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Burdens(?)
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Festival
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Greeting The Victor
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Rug Merchants
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The Musicians
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Victory
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Arrival of Caesar
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At the Antiquarian's
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The Vendor of Antiquities
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Quadriga on the Road to Pompeii(?)
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The Carpet Seller (6)
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Roman Street Scene
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Interior of a Roman Building with Figures