Spanish sculptor, painter, architect, and draughtsman, sometimes called `the Spanish Michelangelo' because of the diversity of his talents.
He was born and died in Granada, and worked there and in Seville and Madrid. His movements were partly dictated by his tempestuous character, for more than once he fled or was expelled from the city he was working in (once for the suspected murder of his wife). In spite of his violent temperament, his work tends to be serene and often sweet.
He studied painting in Seville with Pacheco (Velázquez was his fellow-student) and sculpture with Montañés, and stayed in the city from 1614 to 1638, when he moved to Madrid to become painter to the Count-Duke Olivares and was employed by Philip IV to restore pictures in the royal collection together with Velázquez. Thus he became acquainted with the work of the 16th-century Venetian masters, whose influence is apparent in his later paintings; they are much softer in technique than his earlier pictures, which are strongly lit in the manner of Zurbarán.
From 1652 he worked mainly in Granada, where he designed the façade of the cathedral (1667), one of the boldest and most original works of Spanish Baroque architecture. He was ordained a priest in 1658, as this was necessary for him to further his career at Granada Cathedral. The cathedral has several of Cano's works in painting and sculpture, including a polychrome wooden statue of the Immaculate Conception (1655) that is sometimes considered his masterpiece.
Cano went to Madrid in 1637, and through the influence of the Duke of Olivarez and of Velasques, but chiefly because of his own merit, was made Master of the Royal Works, Painter to the King, and first in rank among the instructors of Don Balthasar Carlos.
Cano was a greater sculptor than painter, but he would have attained fame as a painter even had he never worked in marble.
Cano led an exemplary life, his great fault being his ungovernable temper; he was industrious, studious, and very generous.
Alonso, J.M., J. Cudeiro, R. Perez, F. Gonzalez and C. Acuna, Influence of layer V of area 18 of the cat visual cortex on responses of cells in layer V of area 17 to stimuli of high velocity.
Alonso, J.M., J. Cudeiro, R. Perez, F. Gonzalez and C. Acuna, Orientational influences of layer V of visual area 18 upon cells in layer V of area 17 in the cat cortex.
Alonso JM, Cudeiro J, Pérez R, González F, Casas L, Acuña C (1992) Influence of layer V of visual area 18 of the cat on receptive field properties of cells in layer V of area 17.