Paolo Veronese

Italian Renaissance painter

Paolo Veronese
Self-portrait, 1558–1563, Hermitage Museum
Born1528
Verona, Venetian Republic
Died19 April 1588(1588-04-19) (aged 59–60)
Venice, Venetian Republic
NationalityVenetian
Known forPainting
Notable workThe Wedding at Cana (1563)
The Feast in the House of Levi (1573)
MovementRenaissance, Mannerism, Venetian School
Patron(s)Barbarigo family, Barbaro family
Signature

Paolo Caliari (1528 – 19 April 1588), known as Paolo Veronese (/ˌvɛrəˈnz, -zi/ VERR-ə-NAY-zay, -⁠zee, US also /-si/ -⁠see; Italian: [ˈpaːolo veroˈneːze, -eːse]), was an Italian Renaissance painter based in Venice, known for extremely large history paintings of religion and mythology, such as The Wedding at Cana (1563) and The Feast in the House of Levi (1573). Included with Titian, a generation older, and Tintoretto, a decade senior, Veronese is one of the "great trio that dominated Venetian painting of the cinquecento" and the Late Renaissance in the 16th century.[1] Known as a supreme colorist, and after an early period with Mannerism, Paolo Veronese developed a naturalist style of painting, influenced by Titian.[2]

The Family of Darius before Alexander (1565–1570). Oil on canvas, 236.2cm × 475.9 cm, National Gallery, London.

His most famous works are elaborate narrative cycles, executed in a dramatic and colorful style, full of majestic architectural settings and glittering pageantry. His large paintings of biblical feasts, crowded with figures, painted for the refectories of monasteries in Venice and Verona are especially famous, and he was also the leading Venetian painter of ceilings. Most of these works remain in situ, or at least in Venice, and his representation in most museums is mainly composed of smaller works such as portraits that do not always show him at his best or most typical.

He has always been appreciated for "the chromatic brilliance of his palette, the splendor and sensibility of his brushwork, the aristocratic elegance of his figures, and the magnificence of his spectacle", but his work has been felt "not to permit expression of the profound, the human, or the sublime", and of the "great trio" he has often been the least appreciated by modern criticism.[1] Nonetheless, "many of the greatest artists ... may be counted among his admirers, including Rubens, Watteau, Tiepolo, Delacroix, and Renoir".[3]

Life and work

Deposition of Christ, c. 1547, Castelvecchio Museum

Birth and names

Veronese took his usual name from his birthplace of Verona, then the largest possession of Venice on the mainland. The census in Verona attests that Veronese was born sometime in 1528 to a stonecutter, or spezapreda in the Venetian language, named Gabriele, and his wife Caterina. He was their fifth child.[4] It was common for surnames to be taken from a father's profession, and thus Veronese was known as Paolo Spezapreda. He later changed his name to Paolo Caliari, because his mother was the illegitimate daughter of a nobleman called Antonio Caliari.[5] His earliest known painting is signed "P. Caliari F., "the first known instance in which he used this surname", and after using "Paolo Veronese" for several years in Venice, after about 1575 he resumed signing his paintings as "Paolo Caliari".[5] He was often called "Paolo Veronese" before the last century to distinguish him from another painter from Verona, "Alessandro Veronese", now known as Alessandro Turchi (1578–1649).[6]

Youth

The Conversion of Mary Magdalene, c. 1548, National Gallery

By 1541, Veronese was apprenticed with Antonio Badile, who was later to become his father-in-law, and in 1544 was an apprentice of Giovanni Francesco Caroto; both were leading painters in Verona.[5] An altarpiece painted by Badile in 1543 includes striking passages that were most likely the work of his fifteen-year-old apprentice; Veronese's precocious gifts soon surpassed the level of the workshop, and by 1544 he was no longer residing with Badile.[7] Although trained in the culture of Mannerism then popular in Parma, he soon developed his own preference for a more radiant palette.[8]

In his late teens he painted works for important churches in Verona, and in 1551 he was commissioned by the Venetian branch of the important Giustiniani family to paint the altarpiece for their chapel in the church of San Francesco della Vigna, which was then being entirely rebuilt to the design of Jacopo Sansovino. In the same year he worked on the decoration of the Villa Soranzo near Treviso, with his fellow Veronese Giovanni Battista Zelotti and Anselmo Canneri; only fragments of the frescos remain, but they seem to have been important in establishing his reputation. The description by Carlo Ridolfi nearly a century later mentions that one of the mythological subjects was The Family of Darius before Alexander, the rare subject in Veronese's grandest treatment of secular history, now in the National Gallery, London.[9]

In 1552 Cardinal Ercole Gonzaga, great-uncle of the ruling Guglielmo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua, commissioned an altarpiece, Temptation of St. Anthony for Mantua Cathedral (now at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen in Caen, France), which Veronese painted in situ.[10] He doubtless used his time in Mantua to study the ceilings by Giulio Romano; it was as a painter of ceiling frescos that he would initially make his mark in Venice, where he based himself permanently from the following year.[11]

Venice

St Mark, San Sebastiano (1556–57)
House of Veronese in Venice

Veronese moved to Venice in 1553 after obtaining his first state commission, ceilings in fresco decorating the Sala dei Consiglio dei Dieci (the Hall of the Council of Ten) and the adjoining Sala dei Tre Capi del Consiglio in the Doge's Palace, in the new rooms replacing those lost in the fire of 1547. His panel of Jupiter Hurling Thunderbolts at the Vices for the former is now in the Louvre. He then painted a History of Esther on the ceiling for the church of San Sebastiano (1556–57). It was these ceiling paintings and those of 1557 in the Marciana Library (for which he was awarded a prize judged by Titian and Sansovino) that established him as a master among his Venetian contemporaries.[12] Already these works indicate Veronese's mastery in reflecting both the subtle foreshortening of the figures of Correggio and the heroism of those by Michelangelo.[13]

Villa Barbaro and refectory paintings

By 1556 Veronese was commissioned to paint the first of his monumental banquet scenes, the Feast in the House of Simon, which would not be concluded until 1570. Owing to its scattered composition and lack of focus, however, it was not his most successful refectory mural.[14] In the late 1550s, during a break in his work for San Sebastiano, Veronese decorated the Villa Barbaro in Maser, a newly finished building by the architect Andrea Palladio. The frescoes were designed to unite humanistic culture with Christian spirituality; wall paintings included portraits of the Barbaro family,[15] and the ceilings opened to blue skies and mythological figures. Veronese's decorations employed complex perspective and trompe-l'œil, and resulted in a luminescent and inspired visual poetry.[16] The encounter between architect and artist was a triumph.[17]

The Wedding at Cana, 1562–1563, Louvre

The Wedding at Cana, painted in 1562–1563, was also a collaboration with Palladio. It was commissioned by the Benedictine monks for the San Giorgio Maggiore Monastery, on the eponymous small island across from Saint Mark's, in Venice. The contract insisted on the huge size (to cover 66 square meters), and that the pigment and colors should be of premium quality. For example, the contract specified that the blues should contain the precious mineral lapis-lazuli.[18] The contract also specified that the painting should include as many figures as possible. There are a number of portraits (including those of Titian and Tintoretto, as well as a self-portrait of Veronese) staged upon a canvas surface nearly ten meters wide. The scene, taken from the New Testament Book of John, II, 1–11, represents the first miracle performed by Jesus, the making of wine from water, at a marriage in Cana, Galilee. The foreground celebration, a frieze of figures painted in the most shimmering finery, is flanked by two sets of stairs leading back to a terrace, Roman colonnades, and a brilliant sky.[16]

In the refectory paintings, as in The Family of Darius before Alexander (1565–1570),[19] Veronese arranged the architecture to run mostly parallel to the picture plane, accentuating the processional character of the composition. The artist's decorative genius was to recognize that dramatic perspectival effects would have been tiresome in a living room or chapel, and that the narrative of the picture could best be absorbed as a colorful diversion.[20] These paintings offer little in the representation of emotion; rather, they illustrate the carefully composed movement of their subjects along a primarily horizontal axis. Most of all they are about the incandescence of light and color.[21] The exaltation of such visual effects may have been a reflection of the artist's personal well-being, for in 1565 Veronese married Elena Badile, the daughter of his first master, and by whom he would eventually have a daughter and four sons.[21]

Also painted between 1565 and 1570 is his Madonna and Child with St. Elizabeth, the Infant St. John the Baptist, and St. Justina (now in the Timken Museum of Art, San Diego). In this work St. Justina, a patroness of Padua and Venice, is at the right with the Blessed Virgin Mother and the Christ child in the center. In contrast to Italian works of a century earlier the infant is rendered convincingly as an infant. What makes one stop and take notice in this painting is the infant's reaching out to St. Justina, since a baby of this age would normally limit his gaze to his mother. Completing the work is St. Elizabeth, the cousin of Mary and mother of St. John the Baptist, located on the left. The artist delicately balances the forms of the extended Holy Family and renders them using a superb balance of warm and cool colors.

The Feast in the House of Levi

In 1573 Veronese completed the commission for The Feast in the House of Levi, a last-supper painting for the rear wall of the refectory at the Basilica di Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Castello, Venice. Originally titled The Last Supper, the painting was to replace a Titian painting burnt in a fire; Veronese's oversized (5.55m x 12.80m) replacement depicted a Last Supper banquet scene that included German soldiers, dwarves, and animals – the human and animal exotica usual to Veronese's representational narratives.[22] Artistically, The Feast in the House of Levi indicates Veronese's technical development in using intense and luminous colors for texture, attention to narrative coherence, the acute representation of human emotion, and the psychologically subtle interplay occurring among the characters who crowd the scene.[23]

The Feast in the House of Levi (1573) featured people and animals that the Inquisition perceived as heretical. The Inquisitors' investigation found no heresy, yet ordered Paolo Veronese to re-title the painting something other than The Last Supper, the original title.

Given the subject of the painting, the biblical Last Supper, the humanistic depictions of the characters lacked the piousness usual to Roman Catholic art depicting the Christ character and the events of his life; and the Inquisition readily noticed Veronese's irreligiosity. By the 1570s, the theology of the Counter-Reformation had given legal authority to Roman Catholic doctrine in Venice, which was a new, political development for an artist such as Veronese. In the Venetian republic of the Late–Renaissance, for an artist, painting crowd scenes had acquired political ramifications regarding who and what appeared in a religious painting commissioned from him, regardless of the patron or patroness.

A decade earlier, the Benedictine monks who commissioned The Wedding at Cana (1563) had directed Veronese to freely include as many human figures as would fit in the banquet scene. In contrast, a decade later, Veronese encountered legal, religious constraints that determined the suitability (theological, political, sociological) of who and what he depicted in a painting—thus, on 18 July 1573, Veronese was summoned before the Venetian Holy Inquisition to explain the presence of what Church doctrine considered characters, animals, and indecorum extraneous to an image of the Last Supper of the Christ.[24]

The tribunal's interrogation of Veronese was cautionary, rather than punitive; political, rather than judicial; nonetheless, Veronese explained to the Inquisitiors that "we painters take the same liberties as poets and madmen" in telling a story. Although the Inquisition's tribunal ordered Veronese to repaint the last-supper scene, he opposed their remedy to his theological offences, yet was compelled to re-title the painting from the sacramental The Last Supper to The Feast in the House of Levi.[25] That an artist, such as Veronese, had successfully perdured against the Inquisition's implied accusation of heresy, indicated he had the discreet political support of a patrician patron of the arts.[26]

Assessment

Perseus and Andromeda, 1576–1578

An artist's biography of Paolo Veronese was included in the second edition of the Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (1568), by Giorgio Vasari, with improved coverage of the painters of the Venetian school.

A fuller biography of Veronese had to await Le maraviglie dell'arte ovvero le vite degli illustri pittori Veneti e dello stato (1648), by Carlo Ridolfi, a compilation of the Venetian School painters. Ridolfi said that Veronese's painting of The Feast in the House of Levi (1573) is "by far, the most important source for our knowledge of his art"[3] because "it gave rein to joy, made beauty majestic, made laughter, itself, more festive".[27]

In 2014, the art historian Charles Hope wrote of Veronese's strengths and weaknesses: "He is notable above all as a colorist who used a range of bright hues with a boldness unmatched in his time and scarcely equaled since", but because his use of color "was often calculated to create a harmonious overall effect rather than to single out the main protagonists", his paintings convey little narrative drama. According to Hope, "the effect is sumptuous, seductive but ultimately excessive and a little monotonous, rather like a visit to a patisserie."[28]

In Paintings in the Louvre (1987), Lawrence Gowing’s modern assessment of Paolo Veronese’s artistic achievement is that:

The French had no doubts, as the critic Théophile Gautier wrote in 1860, that Veronese was the greatest colorist who ever lived—greater than Titian, Rubens, or Rembrandt because he established the harmony of natural tones in place of the modeling in dark and light that remained the method of academic chiaroscuro. Delacroix wrote that Veronese made light without violent contrasts, "which we are always told is impossible, and maintained the strength of hue in shadow".

This innovation could not be better described. Veronese’s bright outdoor harmonies enlightened and inspired the whole nineteenth century. He was the foundation of modern painting. But whether his style is in fact naturalistic, as the Impressionists thought, or a most subtle and beautiful imaginative invention must remain a question for each age to answer for itself.[29]

Allegory of Wisdom and Strength, c. 1565

Working practices

In addition to the ceiling creations and wall paintings, Veronese also produced altarpieces (The Consecration of Saint Nicholas, 1561–62, London's National Gallery[30]), paintings on mythological subjects (Venus and Mars, 1578, New York Metropolitan Museum of Art[31]), and portraits (Portrait of a Lady, 1555, Louvre). A significant number of compositional sketches in pen, ink, and wash, figure studies in chalk, and chiaroscuro modelli and ricordi survive.

He headed a family workshop, including his younger brother Benedetto (1538–1598) as well as his sons Carlo and Gabriele, and his nephew Luigi Benfatto (also called dal Friso; 1559–1611), that remained active for a decade or so after his death in Venice in 1588, signing their work "Haeredes Pauli" ("Heirs of Paolo"), and continuing to use his drawings. According to Nicholas Penny, "The role of the workshop seems to have increased steadily, and after 1580 it is rare that we can feel confident that Veronese's was the sole hand involved".[3] Among his pupils were his contemporary Giovanni Battista Zelotti and later, Giovanni Antonio Fasolo, Sigismondo de Stefani, and Anselmo Canneri.[32] The Caliari family continued and another Paolo Caliari published the first monograph on his ancestor in 1888.[3]

Veronese was one of the first painters whose drawings were sought by collectors during his lifetime.[33]

Selected works

TitleCreatedMediumSize (cm)OwnerCity
Arachne or Dialectics(1520)Fresco??Palazzo DucaleVenice, Italy
Leda and the Swan (subject)??Oil on canvas??Musée FeschAjaccio, Corsica
The Conversion of Mary Magdalene(1545–1548)Oil on canvas163.5 × 117National GalleryLondon
The Temptation of St Anthony(1552–1553)Oil on canvas198 × 151Musée des Beaux-ArtsCaen
Zeus ousting the Vices(1553?)Oil on canvas650 × 330LouvreParis
St. Mark Crowning the Virtue(1554?)Oil on canvas330 × 317LouvreParis
Coronation of the Virgin(1555)Oil on canvas?San SebastianoVenice
La Bella Nani (Portrait of a Woman)(1555–1560?)Oil on canvas119 × 103LouvreParis
Annunciation(1555?)Oil on canvas193 × 291UffiziFlorence
Venus Disarming Cupid(1555 c.)Oil on canvas62.52 x 54.49" (158.8 x 138.4 cm)Worcester Art MuseumWorcester, Massachusetts[34]
Jesus among the Doctors in the Temple(1558)Oil on canvas236 × 430PradoMadrid
Assumption of the Virgin(1558?)Oil on canvas340 × 455San Giovanni e PaoloVenice
Supper at Emmaus1559–1560Oil on canvas241 × 415LouvreParis
The Wedding at Cana(1560?)Oil on canvas207 × 457Gemäldegalerie Alte MeisterDresden
Portrait of a Man(1560?)Oil on canvas120 × 102Museum of Fine ArtsBudapest
The Resurrection of Jesus Christ(1560)Oil on canvas...San Francesco della VignaVenice
Decoration of the Villa Barbaro: Bacchus Giving Wine to Men, Giustiniana Giustiniani with Her Nurse and other scenes(1560–1561)Fresco??Villa Barbaro, MaserMaser, Treviso
Venus and Adonis(1561+)Oil on canvas123 × 174Staatliche KunstsammlungenAugsburg
Virgin in Glory with Saints(1562?)Oil on canvas??San SebastianoVenice
St John the Baptist Preaching(1562?)Oil on canvas??Galleria BorgheseRome
Madonna Enthroned with Saints(1562?)Oil on canvas339 × 191Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
The Wedding at Cana(1563)Oil on canvas677 × 994LouvreParis
Petrobelli altarpiece(c. 1563)Oil on canvasNow dividedDulwich Picture Gallery, National Gallery of Scotland, National Gallery of Canada, Blanton Museum of ArtOttawa, Dulwich, Edinburgh & Austin, Texas
Holy Family and Saints (San Zaccaria Altarpiece; 1564)1564Oil on canvas328 × 188Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
Martyrdom of St. George(1564)Oil on canvas426 × 305San Giorgio in BraidaVerona
Sts. Mark and Marcellian Being Led to Martyrdom(1565)Oil on canvas??San SebastianoVenice
Martyrdom of St. Sebastian(1565)Oil on canvas??San SebastianoVenice
Allegory of Wisdom and Strength(1565)Oil on canvas214.6 × 167Frick CollectionNew York
Allegory of Virtue and Vice(1565)Oil on canvas219.1 x 169.5Frick CollectionNew York
The Family of Darius before Alexander(1565–1570)Oil on canvas236.2 × 475.9National GalleryLondon
Madonna and Child with St. Elizabeth, the Infant St. John the Baptist, and St. Justina(1565–1570)Oil on canvas40-7/8 x 62-1/4 in.Timken Museum of ArtSan Diego
Portrait of Daniele Barbaro(1565–1567)Oil on canvas121 × 105.5RijksmuseumAmsterdam
The Allegory of Love four scenes(1570)Oil on canvas191 × 191National GalleryLondon
The Resurrection of Christ(1570?)Oil on canvas136 × 104Gemäldegalerie Alte MeisterDresden
Die Madonna mit der Familie Cuccina(1570?)Oil on canvas167 × 416Gemäldegalerie Alte MeisterDresden
The Finding of Moses(1570?–1575?)Oil on canvas??Kunsthistorisches MuseumVienna
Bathsheba Bathing(1575?)Oil on canvas191 × 224Museum of Fine Arts of LyonLyon
Portrait of a Sculptor(1550?–1585?)Oil on canvas110.5 × 89Metropolitan Museum of ArtNew York
Battle of Lepanto(1572?)Oil on canvas169 × 137Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
The Supper of St Gregory the Great(1572)Oil on canvas??Monte Berico, VicenzaVicenza
The Feast in the House of Levi(1573)Oil on canvas555 × 1,280Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
Adoration of the Magi(1573)Oil on canvas356 × 320National GalleryLondon
The Martyrdom of St. Justine(1573?)Oil on canvas103 × 113UffiziFlorence
Ceres Renders Homage to Venice(1575)Oil on canvas309 × 328Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
Mystical Marriage of St Catherine(1575?)Oil on canvas337 × 241Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
Venus, Mars and Love with a Horse(1575?)Oil on canvas47 × 47Galleria SabaudaTurin
Pietà(1576–1582)Oil on canvas147 × 115The HermitageSt. Petersburg
The Resurrection of Christ(1578?)Oil on canvas273 × 156The Chapel, Chelsea and Westminster HospitalLondon
Mars and Venus United by Love(1578?)Oil on canvas205.7 × 161Metropolitan Museum of ArtNew York
Hermes, Herse and Aglaulus(1576?–1584?)Oil on canvas232.4 × 173Fitzwilliam MuseumCambridge, UK
The Rape of Europa(1580)Oil on canvas240 × 303Sala dell'Anticollegio, Doge's PalaceVenice
Venus and Adonis(1580)Oil on canvas212 × 191PradoMadrid
Venus and Adonis(1580?)Oil on Canvas224.5 x 168.275Seattle Art MuseumSeattle
Christ and the Centurion(1580?)Oil on canvas99.2 × 130.8Toledo Museum of ArtToledo, Ohio
Lucretia(1580s)Oil on canvas109 × 90.5Kunsthistorisches MuseumVienna
Christ in the Garden Supported by an Angel(1580?)Oil on canvas80 × 108Pinacoteca di BreraMilan
St. Anthony Preaching to the Fish(1580?)Oil on canvas??Galleria BorgheseRome
The Vision of St. Helena(1580?)Oil on canvas166 × 134Pinacoteca VaticanaRome
Judith and Holofernes(1580?)Oil on canvas195 × 176Galleria di Palazzo RossoGenoa
The People of Myra Welcoming St. Nicholas(1582?)Oil on canvasdiameter: 198Gallerie dell'AccademiaVenice
Apotheosis of Venice(1585)Oil on canvas904 × 579Doge's PalaceVenice
Siege of Scutari(1585)Oil on canvas904 × 579Doge's PalaceVenice
The Conversion of Saint Pantaleimon(1587)Oil on canvas277 x 160San PantalonVenice
Portrait of Agostino Barbarigo??Oil on canvas60 × 48Museum of Fine ArtsBudapest
Baptism and Temptation of Christ??Oil on canvas245 × 450Pinacoteca di BreraMilan
Portrait of a Venetian Woman (La Bella Nani)??Oil on canvas117.3 × 100.8Alte PinakothekMunich
Susanna in the Bath??Oil on canvas198 × 198LouvreParis
Penitent St. Jerome??Oil on canvas80 x 95Pavia Civic MuseumsPavia[35]
Noli me tangere??Oil on canvas??Museum of GrenobleGrenoble
Christ Crowned with Thornsc. 1585Oil on canvas75.5 x 57.3Montreal Museum of Fine ArtsMontreal
Sitting dog??Oil on canvas44 × 82National GalleryOslo
Supper at Emmaus1565–1570Oil on canvas66 × 79Museum Boijmans Van BeuningenRotterdam
David with the Head of Goliath(1575)Oil on canvas??Lobkowicz PalacePrague

Veronese in religion

  • Theosophical authors have identified Paolo Veronese with the Master of Wisdom or Mahatma known as "The Venetian," who is the Head of the Third Ray.[36]
  • Elizabeth Clare Prophet repeated this information in her "Ascended Masters" teachings.[37]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Rosand, 107
  2. ^ Freedburg, 550–551
  3. ^ a b c d Penny, 333
  4. ^ Pedrocco, Filippo: "Veronese", page 3. SCALA Group S.p.A., 1998.
  5. ^ a b c Penny, 331
  6. ^ Penny, 333 Note 1
  7. ^ Rearick, page 20, 1988.
  8. ^ Bussagli, Marco: "The XVI Century", Italian Art, page 206. Giunti Gruppo Editoriale, 2000.
  9. ^ Penny, 331, 379
  10. ^ "Temptation of St Anthony by VERONESE, Paolo". www.wga.hu.
  11. ^ Penny, 331; Freedberg, 551 and passim in the following pages on the influence of Romano.
  12. ^ Penny, 331; Dunkerton, Jill, et al.: Durer to Veronese: Sixteenth-Century Painting in the National Gallery, page 125. National Gallery Publications, 1999.
  13. ^ Rearick, page 50, 1998.
  14. ^ Rearick, page 75, 1988.
  15. ^ The Portrait of Daniele Barbaro, painted 1566–67, entered the collection of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam in 1952. Veronese: Gods, Heroes and Allegories, De Vecchi, Pierluigi, pages 104–5. Rizzoli, 2004.
  16. ^ a b Rearick, page 10, 1998.
  17. ^ Bussagli, page 207, 2000.
  18. ^ Louvre 1993
  19. ^ United Kingdom. "File:The Family of Darius before Alexander by Paolo Veronese 1570.jpg – Wikimedia Commons". Commons.wikimedia.org. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  20. ^ Dunkerton, et al., page 111, 1999.
  21. ^ a b Rearick, page 13, 1988.
  22. ^ Dunkerton, et al., p. 30, 1999.
  23. ^ Rearick, p. 14, 1988.
  24. ^ Rearick, p. 104, 1988.
  25. ^ Rearick, p. 104 1988. Transcript of the hearing Archived 15 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Penny, p. 333
  27. ^ Rearick, page 14, 1988.
  28. ^ Hope, Charles (8 May 2014). "At the National Gallery", London Review of Books. p. 22.
  29. ^ Gowing, Lawrence: Paintings in the Louvre, page 262. Stewart, Tabori & Chang, 1987.
  30. ^ "Paolo Veronese | The Consecration of Saint Nicholas | NG26 | The National Gallery, London". Nationalgallery.org.uk. Archived from the original on 22 March 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  31. ^ "Paolo Veronese (Paolo Caliari): Mars and Venus United by Love (10.189) | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art". Metmuseum.org. 4 September 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  32. ^ *Bernasconi, Cesare (1864). Painting Studi sopra la storia della pittura italiana dei secoli xiv e xv e della scuola pittorica veronese dai medi tempi fino tutto il secolo xviii. Googlebooks. pp. 337–338, 343.
  33. ^ Eisler, Colin: Masterworks in Berlin: A City's Paintings Reunited, page 270. Little, Brown and Company, 1996.
  34. ^ "[remastered]: VENUS DISARMING CUPID, Paolo Veronese, 2013.50 | Worcester Art Museum". archive.worcesterart.org.
  35. ^ "San Gerolamo penitente". La Pinacoteca Malaspina. Musei Civici di Pavia. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  36. ^ Weller van Hook, "Some Artistic Labours of the Lord of the Cultural System," The Theosophist (December, 1921), 277
  37. ^ Prophet, Mark L., and Prophet, Elizabeth Clare, (2003).The Masters and Their Retreats. Summit University Press. p. 274. ISBN 0972040242.

References

  • Freedberg, Sydney J. (1993). Pelican History of Art (ed.). Painting in Italy, 1500–1600. Penguin Books Ltd. pp. 550–60.
  • Ilchman, Frederick, et al., Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto: Rivals in Renaissance Venice, MFA Publications, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2009, ISBN 978-0878467396
  • Penny, Nicholas, National Gallery Catalogues (new series): The Sixteenth Century Italian Paintings, Volume II, Venice 1540–1600, 2008, National Gallery Publications Ltd, ISBN 1857099133
  • Rearick, W. R., The Art of Paolo Veronese 1528–1588, National Gallery of Art, 1988
  • Rosand, David, Painting in Sixteenth-Century Venice: Titian, Veronese, Tintoretto, 2nd ed. 1997, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521565685
  • Salomon, Xavier F., Veronese, National Gallery London, 2014, ISBN 978-1857095531
  • Watson, Peter, Wisdom and Strength: The Biography of a Renaissance Masterpiece, Hutchinson, 1990, ISBN 009174637X
  • 69 artworks by or after Paolo Veronese at the Art UK site
  • Art view; Homage to a Gentleman of Verona [1]
  • Veronese biography on Web Gallery of Art with link to images of many of his paintings
  • Paolo Caliari – Biographical article in the 1911 Catholic Encyclopedia
  • Rossetti, William Michael (1911). "Paul Veronese" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). pp. 965–966.
  • Gallery at Museum Syndicate
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