Page:Cyclopedia of painters and paintings (IA cyclopediaofpain02cham).pdf/58

 Brussels; Portrait (ascribed to Velasquez), Nantes Museum; Portrait of Young Man, Writing Master (?), Old Pinakothek, Munich.—Gaz. des B. Arts (1864), xvi. 77; xvii. 103; (1865), xviii. 80; (1866), xxi. 308; (1874), ix. 441; (1877), xvi. 281; Havard, A. & A. holl., iv. 43; Vosmaer (1868), 166.

FABRITIUS, KILIAN, flourished about 1633-80. German school; landscape painter, employed at the court of the Elector John George II. of Saxony in 1633-80. Works: Expulsion of Hagar (1650), Stockholm Museum; Landscape, Darmstadt Museum; do., Vienna Museum; Ruins of Burg Weissenfels—Saxony, Wiesbaden Gallery.

FABULLUS (Famulus, Famulis, Amulius), Roman painter, about 60 Employed to decorate the Golden House of Nero; also painted a picture of Minerva. His style was simple and severe. It was his custom to paint but few hours in the day and always to wear his toga when at work, out of respect for the dignity of his profession.—Pliny, xxxv. 37 [120].

FACCINI, PIETRO, born at Bologna in 1562, died in 1602. Bolognese school; history painter, pupil of Annibale Carracci; founded a school in opposition to that of the Carracci, which was successful only a short time. Works: Patron Saints of Bologna, Madonna, Bologna Gallery; Virgin appearing to St. Francis, S. Domenico; Martyrdom of St. Lawrence, S. Giovanni in Monte; Adoration of the Magi, S. Mattia; Madonna and Saints, Marriage of St. Catherine, Dresden Gallery.—Lanzi (Roscoe), iii. 124; Nagler, iv. 214.

FACTOR, PEDRO NICOLAS, El Beato Fray, born in Valencia, June 29, 1520, died there Dec. 23, 1583. Spanish school. Son of a tailor from Sicily; became a Franciscan monk in 1538, and spent his life in religious duties and in painting frescos in the cloister of S. Maria at Valencia. Chief work a Madonna there, selected for prize engraving by Academy of S. Carlos at Valencia. Canonized as a beato or saint of the second order by Pius VI. (1786). None of his works known to exist.—Stirling, i. 368; Cean Bermudez.

FADENO, IL. See Aleni, Tommaso.

FAED, JOHN, born at Burley Mill, Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland, in 1820. History and genre painter; first painted miniatures with success, removed to Edinburgh in 1841, where he turned his attention to genre and portrait painting. Member of R.S.A. in 1851. Works: Boyhood (1850); Cruel Sisters (1851); Cotter's Saturday Night (1854); Philosopher (1855); Household Gods in Danger (1856); Job and his Friends (1858); Ruth and Boaz (1860); Fine Old English Gentleman (1862); Catherine Seyton (1864); Old Age, Stirrup Cup (1867); John Anderson my Jo (1869); Old Mare Maggie (1870); After the Victory (1873); Morning before Flodden (1874); Blenheim (1875); In Memoriam (1876); Goldsmith in his Study (1877); Leisure Hour, Old Basket Maker (1878); Poet's Dream (1882).

FAED, THOMAS, born at Burley Mill, Scotland, in 1826. Genre painter, brother and pupil of John Faed, and student of Edinburgh School of Design. Became an A.R.S.A. in 1849; went to London in 1852; was elected an A.R.A. in 1861, and R.A. in 1864. Ranks high as a delineator of Scottish life, in the school of Wilkie; many of his pictures have been engraved. Works: Rustic Toilet, Mrs. O. Roberts, New York; Shakespeare and his Contemporaries, Corcoran Gallery, Wash