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  1. Carlo Crivelli (c. 1430 – c. 1495) was an Italian Renaissance painter of conservative Late Gothic decorative sensibility, who spent his early years in the Veneto, where he absorbed influences from the Vivarini, Squarcione, and Mantegna.

  2. Carlo Crivelli. This graceful, golden-haired princess is Saint Catherine of Alexandria, identifiable by her traditional attributes of a spiked wheel and martyr’s palm. She comes from the great polyptych (multi-panelled altarpiece) which Crivelli painted for the church of the Dominican Order in Ascoli Piceno in t... Not on display.

  3. Carlo Crivelli ( Venice c. 1430 – Ascoli Piceno 1495) was an Italian Renaissance painter of conservative Late Gothic decorative sensibility, who spent his early years in the Veneto, where he absorbed influences from the Vivarini, Squarcione and Mantegna.

  4. Carlo Crivelli (born c. 1430/35, Venice [Italy]—died c. 1494/95, Ascoli Piceno, Marche) was probably the most individual of 15th-century Venetian painters, an artist whose highly personal and mannered style carried Renaissance forms into an unusual expressionism.

  5. Feb 26, 2024 · Who is Carlo Crivelli and what are the mysterious cucumbers in his religious paintings? Read on the find answers to all these questions.

  6. Carlo Crivelli Italian. ca. 1480. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 606. Symbols of good and evil appear throughout this exquisitely rendered painting. While the apples and fly symbolize sin, the cucumber and goldfinch reference redemption and the soul.

  7. Carlo Crivelli, who frequently included "Venetus" in his signature, was probably born in Venice during the early 1430s. Both his father, Jacopo, and his brother, Vittore, were painters.