Francesco Morone

Francesco Morone (1471 16 May 1529) was an Italian painter, active in his native city of Verona in a Renaissance style. He was the son of the Veronese painter Domenico Morone.[1] The art biographer Vasari praised his frescoes (1505-7) for the cupola of the sacristy in Santa Maria in Organo, Verona. He also painted the organ shutters in that church. Paolo Cavazzola was said to have been a pupil, but may have more aptly worked with one of his family members.[2]

Samson and Delilah. Milan, Museo Poldi Pezzoli.

Works

gollark: 1e6 = 1 million.
gollark: The expected value is 1e6/n - (equivalent monetary cost of dying)/n. So whether it is a good choice depends on whether (equivalent monetary cost of dying is greater than 1e6 euros, which is no.
gollark: I mean, the compress CLI thing, it works fine apart from that.
gollark: Muahahaha. Now I just need to implement "compress", and also any incremental compression whatsoever.
gollark: This was partly ironic. It is horrible and inconsistent. The rules vary and are not obvious. There is an unofficial standard but not everything supports it, most things add extra stuff on, and you need 3000 lines of parser code to support it.

References

  1. National Gallery
  2. Zannandreis, Diego (1891). Giuseppe Biadego (ed.). Le vite dei pittori, scultori e architetti veronesi. Stabilimento Tipo-Litografico G. Franchini, Verona; Digitized by Googlebooks from University of California copy on Feb 22, 2007. pp. 84–87.
  • C. Del Bravo : Sul seguito veronese di A. Mantegna e Francesco Morone in "Paragone" (1962)


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