Leonardo Coccorante (1680–1750) was an Italian painter who was born in Naples, Italy. He studied with Jan Frans van Bloemen (1662–1749), Angelo Maria Costa (1670–1721), and finally with Gabriele Ricciardelli (active between 1741 and 1777). From 1737 to 1739, he was employed decorating the royal palace of Naples. Coccorante died in Naples in 1750.
He is best known for his large highly detailed landscapes with imaginary classical architectural ruins. He often included small figures in the foreground to emphasize the expansiveness of the ruins. Coccorante is classified as a veduta (or vista) painter. The Mykolas Žilinskas Art Gallery (Kaunas, Lithuania), the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Louvre, the Lowe Art Museum (Coral Gables, Florida.), Musée départemental de l'Oise (Beauvais, France), Museum of Grenoble, France), Museo Regionale Agostino Pepoli (Trapani, Italy), and Pinacoteca del Castello Sforzesco (Milan, Italy) are among the public collections holding paintings by Leonardo Coccorante.
Port of Ostia During a Tempest, oil on canvas, 1740s, Lowe Art Museum
Capriccio of architectural ruins with a seascape beyond, oil on canvas
Port of Tarento, oil on canvas painting, 1738
Capriccio of classical ruins with figures, oil on canvas
Capriccio of ruins with figures under stormy night sky, oil on canvas
Architecture with figures, oil on canvas
Architectural Capriccio with figures, dawn. Oil on canvas, Collezione M (private collection) Rome
Architectural Capriccio with figures, dusk. Oil on canvas, Collezione M (private collection) Rome