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This gallery contains also specimens of the two following painters. [1] Bartolomeo Vivarini is known to have worked from 1450 to 1499. He learned oil painting from Antonello da Messina, and is said to have produced, in 1473, the first oil picture done in Venice.
Madonna and Child, tempera and gold on panel painting by Bartolomeo Vivarini, c. 1475, Honolulu Museum of Art. Bartolomeo or Bartolommeo Vivarini (c. 1432 – c. 1499) was an Italian Renaissance painter, known to have worked from 1450 to 1499.
Bartolomeo Vivarini: Holy Conversation: −1465 Alvise Vivarini: Madonna with Child, behind Saints Francis & Bernard: −1485 Daniele da Volterra: Portrait of youth: 1540–1560 Pieter de Witte (Pietro Candido) Holy family: 1584–1585 Pieter de Witte (Pietro Candido) Madonna with Child and Young St. John: pre-1585 Gaspar van Wittel
This image has been assessed under the valued image criteria and is considered the most valued image on Commons within the scope: Left nave of Santi Giovanni e Paolo (Venice) – Triptych of St. Zanipolo: Sts Dominic, Augustin, and Lawrence by Bartolomeo Vivarini.
The work of art itself is in the public domain for the following reason: Public domain Public domain false false This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or fewer .
Antonio Vivarini (Antonio of Murano) (active c. 1440 – 1480) was an Italian painter of the early Renaissance-late Gothic period, who worked mostly in the Republic of Venice. He is probably the earliest of a family of painters, which was descended from a family of glassworkers active in Murano .
The Federal Aviation Administration says an air traffic controller’s instructions kept an American Airlines flight from hitting mountains near Honolulu International Airport in Hawaii.
Alvise Vivarini: Retable of the Pentecost (Bode-Museum, Berlin) Alvise or Luigi Vivarini (1442/1453–1503/1505) was an Italian painter, the leading Venetian artist before Giovanni Bellini. Like Bellini, he was part of a dynasty of painters. His father was Antonio Vivarini and his uncle, with whom he may have trained, was Bartolomeo Vivarini.