Tintoretto's Vision of Paradise (painted with the help of his son, Domenico) is the ... Oils were the favourite medium of the Venetian masters. ... the images depict St George killing the dragon, St Jerome welcoming the lion into the ...
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www.travel2venezia.com/Information/Top-sights.html
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nize the master of the fine and well-known pictures of St. George, ... 3 Compare with this the dragon, which, though badly con- ... any Venetian church-The Presentation in the. Temple, which he painted in I510 for S. Giobbe, ...
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www.jstor.org/stable/862109
www.jstor.org/stable/862109
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In Gothic sculpture and in French art Saint George appears but rarely, and is then in company with other military saints. In pictures of Saint George and the Dragon there may be a certain resemblance to those of Saint Michael, but there are also ... Veronese, Rubens, and Vandyck all painted the Martyrdom of Saint George,
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www.catholic-forum.com/saints/sia05.htm
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He later painted the Last Judgement over the altar, between 1535 and 1541. ... Tintoretto (Jacopo Robusti) (Italian [Venetian], 1518-1594), St. George and the Dragon, c. 1555-8, oil on canvas, 62 x 39 1/2 inches (157.5 x 100.3 cm), National Gallery, London.
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www.artlex.com/ArtLex/h/highrenaissance.html
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Tintoretto painted portraits not only with much of the air of good breeding of Titian's likenesses, but with even greater splendour, and with an astonishing rapidity of execution. The Venetian portrait, it will be remembered, was expected to be more than a likeness. ... c. 1550 St. George and the Dragon (St Petersburg)
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www.artchive.com/artchive/T/tintoretto.html
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he worked not only by sunlight but also by the flicker of torches in order to master the varied play of light. ... The most remarkable is the "Miracle of St. Mark" (the saint releasing a slave about to be tortured), painted in 1548, which is now in the Venetian Academy of Fine Arts. ... "St. George overcoming the Dragon";
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www.newadvent.org/cathen/14737a.htm
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To save a Maid, St George the dragon slew ; A pretty tale, if all is told be true ; Most say, there are no Dragons, and 'tis said ; There was no George: pray God there was a Maid.; John Aubrey, Remains of Gentilism, 1688...
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www.wilsonsalmanac.com/book/apr23.html
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CARPACCIO, VITTORIO, or VITTORE (c.1465—c.1522), Italian painter, was born in Venice, of an old Venetian family. The facts of his life are obscure, but his principal works were executed between 1490 and 1519; and he ranks as one of the finest precursors of the great Venetian masters. ... St George and the Dragon [detail: 1]
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www.artrenewal.org/asp/database/art.asp?aid=616
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Pisanello was educated in Verona his first master was Stefano da Verona. He worked in Venice with Gentile da Fabriano on ... Pisanello painted in his native Verona a depiction of a favourite subject of the period, St George, the Princess and the Dragon. It is a large fresco painted in the crown and spandrels of an arch.
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www.wga.hu/html/p/pisanell/stgeorg.html
www.wga.hu/html/p/pisanell/stgeorg.html
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