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The Triumphs of Caesar are a series of nine large paintings created by the Italian Renaissance artist Andrea Mantegna between 1484 and 1492 [1] for the Gonzaga Ducal Palace, Mantua. They depict a triumphal military parade celebrating the victory of Julius Caesar in the Gallic Wars .
Andrea Mantegna (UK: / m æ n ˈ t ɛ n j ə / ... In what was now his city he went on with the nine tempera pictures of the Triumphs of Caesar, which he had probably ...
Triumphus Caesari, by Andreani, after a painting by Mantegna. Andrea Andreani (1540–1623) was an Italian engraver on wood, who was among the first printmakers in Italy to use chiaroscuro, which required multiple colours. Andreani was born and generally active in Mantua about 1540 (Brulliot says 1560) and died at Rome in 1623.
The Triumph of the Virtues (also known as Minerva Expelling the Vices from the Garden of Virtue) is a painting by the Italian Renaissance painter Andrea Mantegna, completed in 1502. It is housed in the Musée du Louvre of Paris. The triumph was the second picture painted by Mantegna for Isabella d'Este's studiolo (cabinet), after the Parnassus of
Copies by Dondi of the Mantegna's Triumphs of Caesar at Pinacoteca di Siena. Ludovico Dondi (active 1585–1614) was an Italian painter active in Mantua. He is called il Mantovano in 1840 by Romanelli. [1] Garollo calls him Luigi Dondi. [2] He is known for the copies he made of Andrea Mantegna's Triumphs of Caesar. [3] [4]
Andrea Mantegna's series of large paintings on the Triumphs of Caesar (1484–92, now Hampton Court Palace) became immediately famous and was endlessly copied in print form. The Triumphal Procession commissioned by Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I (1512–19) from a group of artists including Albrecht Dürer was a series of woodcuts of an ...
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Exemplary Women of Antiquity is a set of paintings produced between 1495 and 1500 by Andrea Mantegna.They show the Carthaginian noblewoman Sophonisba poisoning herself to avoid being paraded in a Roman triumph, the Roman Vestal Virgin Tuccia proving her chastity by carrying water in a sieve, Judith with the head of Holofernes and Dido holding Sychaeus's funeral urn.