John, versions, Portrait, scenes, Boy, church, oil, fruit, Neptune, Pluto, Jupiter, Baroque, episodes, Fillide, works, Mary Magdalene, Martha, flowers, represent, gods, Martyrdom, other, item, Loreto, Caravaggio, Madonna, Child, style, Salome, Medusa, Angel, shadow, canvas, allegory, Goliath, David, roof, Saint Matthew, influence, Omnia, number and altarpiece.
Results for ""
1608 in art
Caravaggio painted John the Baptist (St John the Baptist at the Fountain)
John the Baptist (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio's decision to paint John the Baptist as a youth was somewhat unusual for the age - the saint was traditionally shown as either an infant, together with the infant Jesus and possibly his own and Jesus's mother, or as an adult, frequently in the act of baptising Jesus.
John the Baptist (Caravaggio)
In 1604 Caravaggio was commissioned to paint a John the Baptist for the papal banker and art patron Ottavio Costa, who already owned the artist's Judith Beheading Holofernes and Martha and Mary Magdalene.
1604 in art
Caravaggio painted John the Baptist
1604 in art
Caravaggio painted John the Baptist (Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica)
1602 in art
Caravaggio painted John the Baptist (Youth with a Ram)
Results for ""
Sacrifice of Isaac (Caravaggio)
According to the early biographer Giovanni Bellori, Caravaggio painted a version of this subject for Cardinal Maffeo Barberini, the future Pope Urban VIII, and a series of payments totalling one hundred scudi were made to the artist by Barberini between May 1603 and January 1604.
Medusa (Leonardo da Vinci)
Rubens and Caravaggio are known to have painted their own versions of the subject, but their indebtedness to Leonardo's painting (assuming they had seen it) is uncertain.
Medusa (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio painted two versions of Medusa, the first in 1596 and the other presumably in 1597, The first version also known as Murtula, by the name of the poet who wrote about it(48x55 cm) is signed Michel A F, (Michel Angelo Fecit) and is in private hands whilst the second version, slightly bigger (60 x 55 cm) is not signed and is in the Uffizi, Florence.
Medusa (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio was used to paint two versions of his masterworks but despite having been included inthe catalogue of originals, exhibited in Milano (Palazzo Reale Curator Vittorio Sgarbi) and in Dusseldorf (Kustat Palast Curator Sir Denis Mahon), the first version of Medusa is unknown to the vast majority of the public.
Supper at Emmaus (Caravaggio, London version)
Caravaggio painted a second version of the Supper at Emmaus (now in the Brera Fine Arts Academy, Milan) in 1606.
Results for ""
Sacrifice of Isaac (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio had previously painted a Portrait of Maffeo Barberini, which presumably pleased the cardinal enough for him to commission this second painting.
Cardsharps (Caravaggio)
From Del Monte's collection the work entered the collection of Cardinal Antonio Barberini - nephew of the Pope Urban VIII whose pre-elevation portrait (Portrait of Maffeo Barberini) Caravaggio would paint in 1598 - in Rome, and was passed through the Colonna-Sciarra family.
1606 in art
Caravaggio painted Portrait of Pope Paul V
Results for ""
Adoration of the Shepherds (Caravaggio)
While in Messina, Caravaggio was contracted to paint four scenes of the Passion.
John the Baptist (Caravaggio)
Apart from these works showing John alone, mostly dated to his early years, Caravaggio painted three great narrative scenes of John's death - the great Execution in Malta, and two sombre Salomes with his head, one in Madrid, and one in London.
Results for ""
1640 in art
Mario Minniti - Italian painter , who was also the model for Caravaggio's painting Boy with a Basket of Fruit (b. 1577)
1577 in art
Mario Minniti - Italian painter , who was also the model for Caravaggio's painting Boy with a Basket of Fruit (d. 1640)
Results for ""
The Flagellation of Christ (Caravaggio)
The family were connected with the Confraternity of the Pio Monte della Misericordia, for whose church Caravaggio had already painted The Seven Works of Mercy.
The Flagellation of Christ
The family were connected with the Confraternity of the Pio Monte della Misericordia, for whose church Caravaggio had already painted The Seven Works of Mercy.
Results for ""
Boy Peeling Fruit (Caravaggio)
As Caravaggio is said to have been painting only "flowers and fruit" for d'Arpino, this would again be a personal piece done for sale outside the workshop, but it was among the works seized from d'Alpino by Cardinal Scipione Borghese in 1607, together with two other early Caravaggios, the Young Sick Bacchus and the Boy with a Basket of Fruit - it is not known how these works came to be in Cesari's collection at the time.
Giuseppe Arcimboldo
His hidden-face still-lives are a possible influence on his younger Lombard contemporary Caravaggio, whose painting of fruit in the Brera museum in Milan ranks as one of the earliest independent still-lives.
Results for ""
The Lute Player (Caravaggio)
On the ground floor Del Monte did his alchemical work and chemistry; above, on the ceiling of the studiolo, Caravaggio painted the gods Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto, representing the Elements.
1597 in art
Caravaggio painted Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto
Results for ""
The Lute Player (Caravaggio)
On the ground floor Del Monte did his alchemical work and chemistry; above, on the ceiling of the studiolo, Caravaggio painted the gods Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto, representing the Elements.
1597 in art
Caravaggio painted Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto
Results for ""
The Lute Player (Caravaggio)
On the ground floor Del Monte did his alchemical work and chemistry; above, on the ceiling of the studiolo, Caravaggio painted the gods Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto, representing the Elements.
1597 in art
Caravaggio painted Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto
Results for ""
Boy Peeling Fruit (Caravaggio)
Boy Peeling Fruit is a painting by the Italian Baroque master Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610) painted circa 1592-1593.
Results for ""
The Seven Works of Mercy (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio did not paint exemplary episodes intended to stir the viewer to religious piety through the illustrative emphasis of gestures and feelings.
Results for ""
Conversion of Paul
The Renaissance Italian master Caravaggio painted two works depicting events from the conversion of Paul, The Conversion of Saint Paul and Conversion on the Way to Damascus.
Results for ""
1598 in art
Caravaggio painted Martha and Mary Magdalene
Results for ""
1598 in art
Caravaggio painted Martha and Mary Magdalene
Results for ""
Boy Peeling Fruit (Caravaggio)
As Caravaggio is said to have been painting only "flowers and fruit" for d'Arpino, this would again be a personal piece done for sale outside the workshop, but it was among the works seized from d'Alpino by Cardinal Scipione Borghese in 1607, together with two other early Caravaggios, the Young Sick Bacchus and the Boy with a Basket of Fruit - it is not known how these works came to be in Cesari's collection at the time.
Results for ""
The Lute Player (Caravaggio)
On the ground floor Del Monte did his alchemical work and chemistry; above, on the ceiling of the studiolo, Caravaggio painted the gods Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto, representing the Elements.
Results for ""
The Lute Player (Caravaggio)
On the ground floor Del Monte did his alchemical work and chemistry; above, on the ceiling of the studiolo, Caravaggio painted the gods Neptune, Jupiter and Pluto, representing the Elements.
Results for ""
Medusa (Caravaggio)
Caravaggio painted two versions of Medusa, the first in 1596 and the other presumably in 1597, The first version also known as Murtula, by the name of the poet who wrote about it(48x55 cm) is signed Michel A F, (Michel Angelo Fecit) and is in private hands whilst the second version, slightly bigger (60 x 55 cm) is not signed and is in the Uffizi, Florence.
Results for ""
San Luigi dei Francesi
The church's most famous item is however the cycle of paintings in the Contarelli Chapel, painted by the Baroque master Caravaggio in 1599-1600 about the life of St. Matthew.
Results for ""
1606 in art
Caravaggio painted Madonna di Loreto
Results for ""
Keith Rowe
Only Caravaggio can paint Caravaggio."
Results for ""
1605 in art
Caravaggio painted Madonna and Child with St. Anne (Dei Palafrenieri)
Results for ""
1605 in art
Caravaggio painted Madonna and Child with St. Anne (Dei Palafrenieri)
Results for ""
St John's Co-Cathedral
Restored in the late 1990's in Florence, this painting is one of Caravaggio's most impressive uses of the chiaroscuro style for which he is most famous with a circle of light illuminating the scene of St John's beheading at the request of Salome.
Results for ""
1609 in art
Caravaggio painted Salome with the Head of John the Baptist (Madrid)
Results for ""
Gorgon
During the late sixteenth century or early seventeenth century, the Baroque artist, Caravaggio, painted Medusa as a beautiful woman who was horrified by her own locks that had been converted into serpents, as displayed to the right.
Results for ""
1602 in art
Caravaggio painted Saint Matthew and the Angel
Results for ""
Boy with a Basket of Fruit
Also note the shadow along the back wall; Caravaggio is probably painting the shadow of him and his canvas.
Results for ""
Boy with a Basket of Fruit
Also note the shadow along the back wall; Caravaggio is probably painting the shadow of him and his canvas.
Results for ""
Jupiter, Neptune and Pluto
Here the cardinal dabbled in alchemy, and Caravaggio has painted an allegory of the alchemical triad of Paracelsus - Jupiter stands for sulphur and air, Neptune for mercury and water, and Pluto for salt and earth.
Results for ""
1599 in art
Caravaggio painted David and Goliath
Results for ""
1599 in art
Caravaggio painted David and Goliath
Results for ""
In the Skin of a Lion
Three prisoners, Buck, Lewis and Caravaggio, are painting the roof of a jail at Kingston.
Results for ""
1602 in art
Caravaggio painted Saint Matthew and the Angel
Results for ""
1639 in art
Jusepe de Ribera (contemporary of Francisco de Zurbarán) painted Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew, an example for Mannerism and especially the style of Caravaggio's painting influence to be felt in Spain.
Results for ""
Erotic art
In 1601 Caravaggio painted the "Amor Vincit Omnia," for the collection of the Marquis Vincenzo Giustiniani.
Results for ""
John the Baptist
Caravaggio painted an especially large number of works including John, from at least five largely nude youths attributed to him, to three late works on his death - the great Execution in Malta, and two sombre Salomes with his head, one in Madrid, and one in London.
Results for ""
The Raising of Lazarus (Caravaggio)
Lazarus, the brother of Martha and Mary, was the patron saint of Giovanni Battista de' Lazzari, to whom Caravaggio was contracted to paint an altarpiece in the church of the Padri Crociferi.
|