Saint Helena and another Saint (?) – Lindenau Museum – Altenburg
The two panels, depicting Saint Helena and another unidentified Saint, were originally part of the Pala della Santissima Annunziata, one of the largest and most
The two panels, depicting Saint Helena and another unidentified Saint, were originally part of the Pala della Santissima Annunziata, one of the largest and most
The work dates back to 1505 and was probably originally part of a larger canvas. The fragment is in fact evidently cut out and represents
The table, probably originally conceived as a predella panel together with its twin showing the Birth of the Virgin (now at the Walker Art Gallery
The miniature depicts the Martyrdom of Saint Sebastian: the Roman soldier was in fact condemned to death because of his Christian faith, and the theme
The altarpiece, commissioned to Perugino in 1496 by the Duke of Milan Ludovico Sforza (known as il Moro) and completed in the firts years of
The painting, dating back to about 1507, was commissioned to commemorate a carpenter from Perugia, Giovanni di Matteo di Giorgio Schiavone, to adorn the family
Within a rounded frame,standing beyond a low gray wall, the Virgin Mary gently holds Baby Jesus naked, the plump feet resting on the parapet. The
The panel, dating back to about 1495, depicts the mourning over the dead Christ: the Virgin is sitting exactly in the center of the composition,
The panel, originally part of the Polyptych of Sant’Agostino, depicts Saint John the Evangelist (or Saint Philip) and Saint Augustine. The painting was realized for
The work, dating back to the first decade of the sixteenth century, was acquired in 1947 by the Museu de Arte in San Paolo in