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Giorgione

[ jawr-joh-nee; Italian jawr-jaw-ne ]

noun

  1. Giorgione de CastelfrancoGiorgio Barbarelli, 1478?–1511, Italian painter.


Giorgione

/ dʒorˈdʒoːne /

noun

  1. Giorgione, Il?14781511MItalianARTS AND CRAFTS: painter Il. original name Giorgio Barbarelli. ?1478–1511, Italian painter of the Venetian school, who introduced a new unity between figures and landscape
“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

Right now, at the Frick Collection’s temporary home on Madison Avenue in New York, an unlikely two-painting show called “Bellini and Giorgione in the House of Taddeo Contarini” has been revealing telltale signs of the Big Bang of Western fine art, and the birth of the artistic universe we now live in.

She then used paintings to illustrate the development of art history through inventive copying, like the evolution of the reclining nude from Giorgione to Titian to Manet.

From Slate

Think of assorted voluptuous, sleeping Venuses by Titian or Giorgione, languorous nudes that are like some exquisite Renaissance Playboy centerfold designed for the private gratification of an inevitably male patron.

A picture by the Venetian artist Giorgione is referred to as “The Three Philosophers,” but the title is that vague only because we have never been able to settle on what the artist had in mind for his three figures.

Nagel believes that Giorgione had such unsettled meaning as his goal, and he tracks how the artist actually worked to make his subject less legible, abandoning the standard religious imagery of the magi at the manger by leaving a blank space where you’d expect Christ and his mother, turning the three kings into the “philosophers” of our new title.

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GiordanoGiorgi system