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Annunciation is a 1570 painting by the Greek artist of the Spanish Renaissance El Greco, now in the Museo del Prado in Madrid. According to the art historian José Álvarez Lopera, it derives from an engraving by Jacopo Caraglio.
Annunciation is a 1575–1576 oil painting on canvas by the Greek artist of the Spanish Renaissance El Greco. It is one of the earliest paintings by the artist and depicts the Annunciation, a key topic in Christian art. The painting is now in the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, in Madrid.
c. 1570 oil on wood 64.5 × 83.2 National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Flight into Egypt: 1570 oil on wood 15.9 × 21.6 Prado, Madrid Annunciation: 1570 oil on wood 26.7 × 20 Prado, Madrid Adoration of the Shepherds: 1570–1572 oil on canvas 114 × 104.5 private collection Adoration of the Magi: 1570 oil on canvas San Diego Museum of Art
Annunciation (El Greco, Prado, 1570) B. Bathsheba at her Bath (Veronese) C. Christ at the Sea of Galilee; Christ Driving the Money Changers from the Temple (El Greco ...
The Annunciation is the biblical episode of the announcement by the archangel Gabriel to Mary that ... Prado, 1570), 1570, in Madrid, Spain; Annunciation (El Greco ...
Annunciation is an oil painting on canvas executed ca. 1603–1605 by El Greco, produced as part of a contract to provide paintings for a church in Illescas, Toledo.The painting still hangs in the church, the Santuario de Nuestra Señora de la Caridad, with three others from the same set (Charity, Coronation of the Virgin and Nativity), whilst the fifth is now in the National Museum of Art of ...
It and three of the other paintings still hang in the church (Charity, Nativity and Annunciation), whilst the fifth is now in the National Museum of Art of Romania (Marriage of the Virgin). It shows the Coronation of the Virgin by God the Father and God the Son, with the Holy Spirit shown above as a dove.
The Annunciation is a painting by the Italian Renaissance master Titian, executed between 1559 and 1564. It remains in the church of San Salvador in Venice , for which it was commissioned. Originally three paintings were commissioned by the D'Anna family for their chapels in the church of San Salvador in Venice, northern Italy. [ 1 ]