The High Renaissance
 
&

Mannerism



   

 


El Greco
 
 
 

 

El Greco

(b Candia [now Herakleion], Crete, c. 1541; d Toledo, 7 April 1614).

Greek painter, designer and engraver, active in Italy and Spain. One of the most original and interesting painters of 16th-century Europe, he transformed the Byzantine style of his early paintings into another, wholly Western manner. He was active in his native Crete, in Venice and Rome, and, during the second half of his life, in Toledo. He was renowned in his lifetime for his originality and extravagance and provides one of the most curious examples of the oscillations of taste in the evaluation of a painter, and of the changes of interpretation to which an artist’s work can be submitted.

 
 


A Lady in a Fur Wrap

1577-80
Oil on canvas, 62 x 59 cm
Art Gallery & Museums Kelvingrove, Glasgow


 

 


A Boy Blowing on an Ember to Light a Candle

1570-72
Oil on canvas, 60,5 x 50,5 cm
Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte, Naples



 

 

Christ Healing the Blind

1570s
Oil on canvas, 119 x 146 cm
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York


 

The Purification of the Temple

1571-76
Oil on canvas, 117 x 150 cm
Institute of Arts, Minneapolis


 

Pieta

c. 1575
Oil on canvas, 66 x 48 cm
The Hispanic Society of America, New York


 

The Annunciation

c. 1576
Oil on canvas, 117 x 98 cm
Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection, Madrid


 

The Disrobing of Christ

1577-79
Oil on canvas, 285 x 173 cm
Sacristy of the Cathedral, Toledo



 

Vincenzo Anastagi

1571-76
Oil on canvas, 188 x 127 cm
Frick Collection, New York



 

Portrait of a Man

c. 1575
Oil on canvas, 116 x 98 cm
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen