Artists of the Italian Renaissance Quiz
- Question: Who painted the Last Supper?
- Answer: Leonardo da Vinci’s Last Supper is among the most famous artworks in the world, painted probably between 1495 and 1498 for the Dominican monastery Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan.
- Question: Who is the greatest Italian painter of the Venetian school, known for his powerful portraits, religious paintings, and sumptuous mythological subjects?
- Answer: Titian was the greatest Italian Renaissance painter of the Venetian school. He was recognized early in his own lifetime as a supremely great painter, and his reputation has, in the intervening centuries, never suffered a decline.
- Question: Who created the Renaissance painting The Birth of Venus?
- Answer: Sandro Botticellipainted The Birth of Venus (c. 1485) for the home of Lorenzo di Pierfrancesco de’ Medici. It depicts the birth of love in the world.
- Question: Who among these painters is considered one of the greatest of the Florentine Renaissance?
- Answer: Sandro Botticelli was one of the greatest painters of the Florentine Renaissance. His The Birth of Venus and Primavera are often said to epitomize for modern viewers the spirit of the Renaissance.
- Question: Who is considered the most violent of the followers of Caravaggio?
- Answer: While in Florence, Artemisia Gentileschi began to develop her own distinct style of painting. Her colours are more brilliant than those of her father, Orazio, and she continued to employ the tenebrism (the use of extreme contrasts of light and dark for dramatic effect) made popular by Caravaggio long after her father had abandoned that style. Although her compositions were graceful, she was perhaps the most violent of all the Caravaggisti; she illustrated such subjects as the story from the Apocrypha of Judith, the Jewish heroine, beheading Holofernes, an invading general.
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National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Andrew W. Mellon Collection (accession no. 1937.1.21)
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Andrew W. Mellon Collection (accession no. 1937.1.21)