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Vittore Carpaccio
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Venetian_Ladies,known_as_the_courtesans
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mk157
c.1490
Oil_on_wood
94x61cm
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Click to Enlarge
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Vittore_Carpaccio
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Venetian Ladies,known as the courtesans
new16/Vittore Carpaccio-874784.jpg
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mk157
c.1490
Oil on wood
94x61cm
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Italian
1455-1526
Vittore Carpaccio Locations
His name is associated with the cycles of lively and festive narrative paintings that he executed for several of the Venetian scuole, or devotional confraternities. He also seems to have enjoyed a considerable reputation as a portrait painter. While evidently owing much in both these fields to his older contemporaries, Gentile and Giovanni Bellini, Carpaccio quickly evolved a readily recognizable style of his own which is marked by a taste for decorative splendour and picturesque anecdote. His altarpieces and smaller devotional works are generally less successful, particularly after about 1510, when he seems to have suffered a crisis of confidence in the face of the radical innovations of younger artists such as Giorgione and Titian.
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