Nicola Samorì, born in 1977 in Forlì, Italy, is an artist known for his dark and atmospheric paintings and sculptures that draw inspiration from the Baroque and Mannerist periods. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Bologna, and his works have been exhibited in numerous… https://t.co/R5zmrRpZnI

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Giuseppe Cesari (February 1568 – 3 July 1640) was an Italian Mannerist painter.1632

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Orazio Lomi Gentileschi (1563–1639) was an Italian painter. Born in Tuscany, he began his career in Rome, painting in a Mannerist style.

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The best saint? Well, St Sebastian is certainly up there! He only really became popular in the Mannerist epoch. Why was that? It's something else to ponder in my upcoming TV series about the movement. In the meantime, art lovers, who did these? NO GOOGLING! I'LL NOTICE!

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Bronzino was seen as a mannerist painter in that he stretched & twisted bodies to achieve an elegant form. His religious images are fine examples of that. The Virgin (1555), Cosimo I de’ Medici (1559), Noli Me Tangere (1561) & Allegory of Happiness (1564)

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Born Tintoretto Italian & masterful exponent of the Venetian Renaissance school Renowned for the boldness & dynamism of his brushwork & speed he worked at Known as Il Furioso (The Furious) work is characterised by dramatic gestures muscular …

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FOG GATE RUNNER.

This painting emerged from my previously-described interest of merging aspect of (hard sf, machinery, representational) with (symbolic, mannerist influence, surreal elements).

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Primaticcio was an Italian Mannerist, which means he enjoyed putting elongated nudes into bizarre, heavily stylized situations. There is one on the left of this painting.
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To anyone who’s just got their A level results - bravo! Sitting exams is a trial. My heart goes out to every one of you. Here’s some Mannerist art from my next series to celebrate getting your results! Whatever they are!!! Remember - there’s no such thing as a bad exam result!

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These came from the title "Lost Souls Unwatched by the Lord of Metal" and the Mannerist art movement.

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Bronzino was seen as a mannerist painter in that he stretched & twisted bodies to achieve an elegant form. His religious images are fine examples of that. The Virgin (1555), Cosimo I de’ Medici (1559), Noli Me Tangere (1561) & Allegory of Happiness (1564)

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There is something eerily modern and creepy about "Sirens and Odysseus" and "Odysseus and Penelope" by Francesco Primaticcio, born this day 1504. Just labelling him a "mannerist" doesn't quite get the nightmarish quality and sense of foreboding right.

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I don't know why, but the strange Mannerist prints of Jacques Bellange (1575-1616) have always intrigued me. The pudgy balloon bodies with the attenuated limbs (fingers esp), the naked yet clothed w lots of drapery, and the shimmering light makes for a strange world.

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Gian Paolo Lomazzo’s Trattato dell'arte della pittura, scoltura et architettura (1584) – a theoretical text that codifies aesthetics in a more formalized and academic manner - is seen as a seminal text in the development of Italian mannerist theories.

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Born Tintoretto Italian & masterful exponent of the Venetian Renaissance school Renowned for the boldness & dynamism of his brushwork & speed he worked at Known as Il Furioso (The Furious) work is characterised by dramatic gestures muscular …

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Rudolf II was also a notable patron of arts (especially of Northern Mannerist art), humanities & sciences.

Rudolf painted as Vertumnus, Roman God of the seasons, by one of his favourite artists Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1590–91).

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Orsola Maddalena Caccia, born Theodora Caccia (1596–1676) was an Italian mannerist painter and Christian nun. She painted religious images, altarpieces, and still lifes.

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