Bartolomeo Traballesi

Last updated

Bartolomeo Traballesi (active 1560, died 1585) was an Italian painter active in Florence, Italy in a Mannerist style. [1]

He was one of the painters engaged for the decoration of the Studiolo of Francesco I Medici in the Palazzo Vecchio of Florence.

Related Research Articles

Pietro Annigoni Italian painter (1910–1988)

Pietro Annigoni was an Italian artist, portrait and fresco painter, best known for his portraits of Queen Elizabeth II, and a medallist. His work was in the Renaissance tradition, contrasting with the modernist style that prevailed in his time.

Cosimo Rosselli Italian painter

Cosimo Rosselli was an Italian painter of the Quattrocento, active mainly in his birthplace of Florence, but also in Pisa earlier in his career and in 1481–82 in the Sistine Chapel in Rome, where he painted some of the large frescoes on the side walls.

Justus Sustermans

Justus Sustermans, Joost Sustermans or Suttermans, his given name Italianised to Giusto, was a Flemish painter and draughtsman who is mainly known for his portraits. He also painted history and genre paintings, still lifes and animals.

Ottavio Leoni Italian painter

Ottavio Leoni (1578–1630) was an Italian painter and printmaker of the early-Baroque, active mainly in Rome.

Sano di Pietro Italian painter (1405–1481) known for Christian works

Sano di Pietro or Ansano di Pietro di Mencio (1405–1481) was an Italian painter of the Sienese school of painting. He was active for about half a century during the Quattrocento period, and his contemporaries included Giovanni di Paolo and Sassetta.

Bagatti Valsecchi Museum

The Bagatti Valsecchi Museum is a historic house museum in the Montenapoleone district of downtown Milan, northern Italy.

Events from the year 1619 in art.

Maso di Banco Italian painter

Maso di Banco was an Italian painter of the 14th century, who worked in Florence, Italy. He and Taddeo Gaddi were the most prominent Florentine pupils of Giotto di Bondone, exploring the three-dimensional dramatic realism inaugurated by Giotto.

The decade of the 1480s in art involved some significant events.

The decade of the 1460s in art involved some significant events.

The decade of the 1450s in art involved many significant events, especially in sculpture.

The decade of the 1430s in art involved some significant events.

Giuseppe Bezzuoli Italian painter (1784-1855)

Giuseppe Bezzuoli was an Italian painter of the Neoclassic period, active in Milan, Rome, and his native city of Florence.

Bicci di Lorenzo Italian renaissance painter (1373–1452)

Bicci di Lorenzo (1373–1452) was an Italian painter and sculptor, active in Florence.

The decade of the 1380s in art involved some significant events.

Bartolomeo di Giovanni Italian painter

Bartolomeo di Giovannidi Domenico (1458?-1501) was an Italian Renaissance painter active in Florence. His works were first identified by the art historian Bernard Berenson, who did not know the painter's real name so called him the "Alunno di Domenico". This name was based on Berenson's observation that the painter executed the predella of Ghirlandaio's Adoration of the Magi (1488) in the Ospedale degli Innocenti, the foundling hospital in Florence. Archival research later yielded the painter's real name as Bartolomeo di Giovanni. Bartolomeo also collaborated with Sandro Botticelli.

William Louis Sonntag American painter

William Louis Sonntag Sr. (1822–1900) was an American landscape painter.

Elizabeth Boott American painter

Elizabeth "Lizzie" Otis Lyman Boott was an American painter of still lifes, landscapes, and portraits. She was the daughter of the classical music composer Francis Boott and Elizabeth Boott. She married Frank Duveneck, her former teacher, and lived in the Villa Castellini in Florence.

Zanobi Strozzi Italian painter

Zanobi di Benedetto di Caroccio degli Strozzi, normally referred to more simply as Zanobi Strozzi, was an Italian Renaissance painter and manuscript illuminator active in Florence and nearby Fiesole. He was closely associated with Fra Angelico, probably as his pupil, as told by Vasari. He is the same painter as the Master of the Buckingham Palace Madonna. Most of his surviving works are manuscript illuminations but a number of panel paintings have also been attributed to him, including seven altarpieces and six panels with the Virgin and Child, along with some designs for metalwork.

Pacino di Buonaguida Italian painter

Pacino di Buonaguida was an Italian painter active in Florence in the Gothic.

References

  1. Brooklyn Museum, Portrait of Woman] at Brooklyn Museum.