Giuseppe Guzzardi (December 8, 1845 in Adrano – September 14, 1914 in Florence) was an Italian painter.
Guzzardi was born in Adernò, now called Adrano. He first trained as a child with a local painter, Vincenzo Costa. His early work showed such promise that the comune awarded him a stipend to study in Florence, where he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts under Antonio Ciseri.
In 1874, he first exhibited at the Florentine Promotrice. In 1876 at the Academy in Florence, he exhibited The Virgin on Golgotha (now in Sanctuary of Maria SS. Ausiliatrice of Adrano). In 1876 he exhibited at the Florentine Promotrice Rural Idyll, which the Artistic Fellowship selected to be copied for distribution to its members. He was also in demand as a portraitist.
In the 1880s, he was named honorary professor at the Academy in Florence. He returned to his hometown of Adrano in 1887, to bring help during a cholera epidemic. After the epidemic, he returned to Tuscany and painted landscapes of Sicily, including Turiddu and Carminuzza, exhibited in 1887 at the Florentine Promotrice, and was awarded a gold medal at the International Exposition in Cologne in 1889.
In 1900, he painted a Jesus appears to the Blessed Margaret Mary Alacoque, commissioned for the Cathedral Church of Adernò . Two years later, he painted a Repentance of Mary Magdalene for the cathedral.