Caravaggio$506451$ - traduzione in Inglese
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Caravaggio$506451$ - traduzione in Inglese

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Caravaggio (movie); Caravaggio (film); Caravaggio (song)

Caravaggio      
n. Caravaggio, apellido; Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571-1610), pintor italiano; Polidoro Caldara da Caravaggio (1496-1543), pintor italiano
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio         
  • Gemäldegalerie]], [[Berlin]]. Caravaggio shows [[Cupid]] prevailing over all human endeavors: war, music, science, government.
  • ''Sacred Love Versus Profane Love'' (1602–03), by Giovanni Baglione. Intended as an attack on his hated enemy, Caravaggio, it shows a winged male youth with an arrow, most likely a representation of Eros, the god associated with Aphrodite and sexual (i.e., profane) love, on one side, a devil with Caravaggio's face on the other, and between an angel representing pure, meaning non-erotic or sacred, love.
  • abbr=on}}, [[Galleria Borghese]], [[Rome]]
  • Basket of Fruit]]'', c. 1595–1596, oil on canvas, [[Pinacoteca Ambrosiana]], [[Milan]]
  • Salome with the Head of John the Baptist]]'', [[Royal Palace of Madrid]]
  • abbr=on}}, [[National Gallery, London]]. Self-portrait of Caravaggio as the figure at the top left.
  • New York]]
  • The Entombment of Christ]]'', (1602–1603), [[Pinacoteca Vaticana]], [[Rome]]
  • Medusa]]'', c. 1597. [[Uffizi]], [[Florence]]
  • The Seven Works of Mercy]]'', 1606–1607, [[Pio Monte della Misericordia]], [[Naples]]
  • ''[[Nativity with St. Francis and St. Lawrence]]'', 1600
  • Judith Beheading Holofernes]]'' 1599–1602, [[Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica]], Rome
  • ''[[Conversion on the Way to Damascus]]'', 1601, [[Cerasi Chapel]], [[Santa Maria del Popolo]], [[Rome]]
  • The Crucifixion of Saint Peter]]'', 1601, [[Cerasi Chapel]], [[Santa Maria del Popolo]], [[Rome]]
  • David with the Head of Goliath]]'', 1609–1610, [[Galleria Borghese]], [[Rome]]
  • Death of the Virgin]]'', 1601–1606, [[Louvre]], [[Paris]]
  • Map of Caravaggio's travels
  • ''The Lute Player'']] (Hermitage version), c. 1600. [[Hermitage Museum]], [[Saint Petersburg]]. (commissioned by [[Francesco Maria del Monte]])
  • ''Narcissus at the Source'']], 1597–1599, [[Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica]], Rome
  • ''Old Woman and Boy with Candles'' by Rubens
  • [[Fillide Melandroni]]
  • ''[[The Raising of Lazarus]]'' and the ''[[Adoration of the Shepherds]]''. [[Regional Museum of Messina]], Sicily, Italy
  • Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy]]'' (c. 1595), [[Wadsworth Atheneum]], [[Hartford]]
  • ''[[Saint Jerome Writing]]'', c. 1605–1606, [[Galleria Borghese]], [[Rome]]
  • ''The Beheading of Saint John'']] (1608) by Caravaggio ([[Saint John's Co-Cathedral]], [[Valletta]], [[Malta]])
  • The Calling of Saint Matthew]]'' (1599–1600), [[Contarelli Chapel]], [[San Luigi dei Francesi]], [[Rome]]. Without recourse to flying angels, parting clouds or other artifice, Caravaggio portrays the instant conversion of St Matthew, the moment on which his destiny will turn, by means of a beam of light and the pointing finger of Jesus.
  • The Denial of Saint Peter]]'' (1610), [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
  • The Incredulity of Saint Thomas (Ecclesiastical Version, 1601), Private collection, Florence, Italy
  • ''[[The Taking of Christ]]'', 1602, [[National Gallery of Ireland]], [[Dublin]]. The [[chiaroscuro]] shows through on the faces and armour even in the absence of a visible shaft of light. The figure on the extreme right is a self-portrait.
ITALIAN PAINTER
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio; Michelangelo da Caravaggio; Michelangelo Caravaggio; Carravagio; Michelangelo Amerighi Caravaggio; Michelangelo Merisi; Caravaggio (Michaelangelo Morigi); Ecstacy of saint francis; Caravaggio (disputed); Michaelangelo (Caravaggio) Morigi; Morigi, Michaelangelo (Caravaggio); Michelangelo Merisi Caravaggio; Caravaggiesque; Carvaggio; Caravage; Caravagio; Caravaggio Merisi; Michelangelo Merisi De Caravaggio; Michelangelo Merisi Da Caravaggio; Carravaggio; Michael Agnolo van Caravaggio; Michelangelo Nerosi da Caravaggio; Michelangelo Merisi Da Carravaggio; Cravaggio; Michaelangelo Merisi; Michelangelo da Merisi; Michaelangelo da Carravagio; Michelangelo Amerighi da Caravaggio; Caravaggesque; Michael Angelo Merigi; Carvaccio
n. Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1573-1610), pintor barroco italiano

Definizione

Cabeza de medusa
aspecto de la red venosa superficial de la pared anterior del abdomen que, en caso de hipertensión portal, se asemeja a la cabeza de una medusa [ICD-10:09 085 I86.8]

Wikipedia

Caravaggio (disambiguation)

Caravaggio (1571–1610) was a painter, famous for his dramatic use of lighting.

Caravaggio may also refer to:

  • Caravaggio, Lombardy, Italy, a comune in the province of Bergamo
  • Polidoro da Caravaggio (c. 1499 – 1543), painter best known for his now-vanished paintings on the facades of Roman houses (unrelated to the above)
  • Caravaggio (1941 film), an Italian film directed by Goffredo Alessandrini
  • Caravaggio (1986 film), a British film about the painter directed by Derek Jarman
  • Caravaggio (2007 film), a 2007 Italian television film
  • Caravaggio (restaurant), a New York City Italian restaurant
  • Caravaggio (horse), thoroughbred racehorse, winner of the 2017 Commonwealth Cup
  • Caravaggio (train), an electric train built by Hitachi Rail for Italian railways
  • "Caravaggio", a song by Claudia Faniello for the Malta Song for Europe 2008
  • David Caravaggio, a character from the novels In the Skin of a Lion and The English Patient
  • Caravaggio, a character in the Canadian science fiction television series Starhunter and Starhunter 2300
  • Caravaggio, a ballet by Italian choreographer Mauro Bigonzetti, with music by Bruno Moretti