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Premio Mylius | |
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Awarded for | art prize; awards for painting in oils and for fresco painting |
Date | 1841–1939 |
Location | Milan, Lombardy |
Country | Italy |
Presented by | Accademia di Brera, Milan |
The Premio Mylius was an Italian prize for painting. It was established by the Austrian industrialist Heinrich Mylius in 1841 and awarded by the Accademia di Brera in Milan,[1]: 17 which at that time was under Habsburg rule. In 1856 there were two types of award, an annual prize of 700 Austrian lire for a painting in oils, and a biennial award of 1000 lire for fresco work.[2]: 155 [3] It was awarded until the outbreak of the Second World War.[1]: 29
Among the recipients of the award were Salvatore Mazza (1856), Pietro Michis (1868), Vespasiano Bignami (1869), Giovanni Battista Ferrari (1870), Filippo Carcano (1878), Giovanni Beltrami , (1884) Amerino Cagnoni (1886), Francesco Filippini (1890), Egidio Riva (1902), Donato Frisia (1920) and Trento Longaretti (1939).[1]: 29 [4][5][6]