Neapolitan School (1600–1800), Italian, Emerging in the vibrant cultural hub of Naples during the Baroque and Rococo periods, this collective of painters and sculptors blended dramatic chiaroscuro with a distinctly southern Italian sensibility. While no single figure defines the group, their work often reveled in theatrical religious scenes—martyrdoms glowing with candlelit intensity, ecstatic saints caught mid-revelation—yet also captured the city’s gritty vitality through genre paintings of street urchins and bustling markets. Caravaggio’s legacy loomed large in their tenebrist techniques, but local color softened the austerity; even biblical narratives unfolded against backdrops of Vesuvian landscapes or sun-bleached piazzas. By the 18th century, the school’s focus shifted toward lighter, almost mischievous elegance under artists like Francesco Solimena and Luca Giordano, whose ceiling frescoes dissolved architectural boundaries with frothy clouds and tumbling drapery. Patrons across Europe coveted their ability to balance sacred grandeur with human warmth—a Magdalene’s tearstained cheek might gleam beside a still-life of figs tumbling from a market basket. Though later overshadowed by academic movements, their influence lingered in the Romantic era’s love of emotional immediacy and the play of light. Today, rediscovery of lesser-known members like Andrea Vaccaro reveals a school less uniform than once assumed, united not by dogma but by Naples’ own contradictions: piety and earthiness, shadow and shimmer.