Ubaldo Gandolfi brought elegance, movement, and expressive drawing into late Baroque painting in Bologna. His religious, mythological, and allegorical subjects combine classical structure with a lively sense of gesture, drama, and human presence.
He trained at the Accademia Clementina and became part of a prominent artistic family that included his brother Gaetano Gandolfi. Active mainly in and around Bologna, Ubaldo worked as a painter, draftsman, and sculptor, producing altarpieces, mythological scenes, portraits, and studies from life.
His work remains admired for its technical fluency and vitality. Gandolfi’s figures are graceful but not static; they carry the energy of an artist deeply interested in anatomy, expression, and the dramatic possibilities of the human body.