Michelangelo Aliprandi
Michelangelo Aliprandi (1527–1595) was an Italian painter from Verona, who also painted a fresco at the Miniscalchi Palace there.[1]. He who flourished from about 1560 to 1582.
Work
He was an imitator, if not a pupil, of Paolo Veronese, in whose style he painted an altar-piece — the Madonna and Child between St. Roch and St. Sebastian — in the church of SS. Nazaro e Celso in Verona, where it is still preserved. Many of the works which Aliprandi painted in and around his native city are however lost.
His drawing of Virgin and Child crowned by the angels, with St. Sebastian and St. Rock is in the Louvre.[2]
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gollark: It would NOT undermine it, we mostly just want someone to become owner and run an election.
gollark: We *can* technically maybe move everyone to umnikos, except a bunch of people will inevitably *not* and the delay could kill it.
gollark: Why do you want to be owner if someone becomes owner?
gollark: What if you transfer to umnikos?
References
External Link
Attribution:
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1886). "Aliprandi, Michelangelo". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.
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