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Bronzino

[ brawn-dzee-naw ]

noun

  1. A·gno·lo (di Co·si·mo di Ma·ria·no) [ah, -nyaw-law dee , kaw, -zee-maw dee mah-, ryah, -naw], 1502–72, Italian painter.


Bronzino

/ bronˈdziːno /

noun

  1. BronzinoIl15031572MItalianFlorentineARTS AND CRAFTS: painter Il , real name Agnolo di Cosimo . 1503–72, Florentine mannerist painter
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Agnolo Bronzino in Florence, Frans Hals in Haarlem, Hyacinthe Rigaud in Paris — lots of great European portrait painters exploited the language of wardrobe, but none more eloquently than Goya.

We opted for the whole Bronzino, which was spectacular, flaky, and perfectly prepared.

From Salon

“We have two Titians, we have a Tintoretto, we have a Bronzino — and they’re all of men,” Aimee Ng, a curator who co-organized the 2019 exhibition, said of the paintings currently in the collection.

They sent a photograph to Carlo Falciani, a professor of art history at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence and an expert in Florentine portraiture, who concluded the work was by Bronzino.

Among other clues, Mr. Falciani wrote in an email, the hands were drawn the same way that they were in Bronzino’s youthful portraits and that “the clear light and the stereometric form of the figure in space are exactly those of Bronzino.”

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