Anthology of Works
- The Virgin and Child with Saints Dominic and Catherine of Siena (c. 1500-1505)
- Adoration of the Child (1508–1509)
- Madonna and Child (1510)
- Neptune and Pallas (1512)
- Madonna delle Nuvole (1514)
- Saint Catherine of Alexandria (c. 1515-1530)
- Madonna del Baldacchino (1517)
- The Madonna and Child Enthroned with Saints William of Aquitaine, Clare, Anthony of Padua and Francis (1517–1518)
- The Vision of Saint Augustine (c. 1518)
- Massacre of the Innocents (1519)
- The Holy Family with Saints John the Baptist, Elizabeth, Zacharias and (?) Francis (1520)
- The Agony in the Garden (1520s-1530s)
- Baptism of Christ (1520–1525)
- Madonna del Pilastro (1523)
- Madonna Enthroned with Saints (1524)
- A Pagan Sacrifice (1526)
- An Allegory of Love (c. 1527-1539)
- Annunciation (1528)
- Madonna Enthroned with Saints (1532)
- Madonna in Glory (1532)
- Raising of Lazarus (1534)
- The Miracle of the Swine (c. 1535)
- Christ and the Samaritan Woman (1536)
- The Triumph of Bacchus (1540 finished by Garofalo, from unfinished 1517 draft by Raffael)
- Blessing of Saint John the Baptist (1542)
- Conversion of Saint Paul (1545)
- Annunciation (1550)
- Holy Family
- Holy Family
- Jesus in the Orchard
- Madonna and Child Enthroned
- Madonna Enthroned with Saints
- Madonna with Saint John and Saint Elisabeth
- Mars, Venus and Cupido
- St Sebastian
- Washing feet of Christ
Read more about this topic: Benvenuto Tisi
Famous quotes containing the words anthology of, anthology and/or works:
“I please
To plant some more dew-wet anemones
That they may weep.”
—Unknown. The Thousand and One Nights.
AWP. Anthology of World Poetry, An. Mark Van Doren, ed. (Rev. and enl. Ed., 1936)
“Youve strung your breasts
with a rattling rope of pearls,
tied a jangling belt
around those deadly hips
and clinking jewelled anklets
on both your feet.
So, stupid,
if you run off to your lover like this,
banging all these drums,
then why
do you shudder with all this fear
and look up, down;
in every direction?”
—Amaru (c. seventh century A.D.?, Kashmirian king, compiler, author of some of the poems in the anthology which bears his name. translated from the Amaruataka by Martha Ann Selby, vs. 31, Motilal Banarsidass (1983)
“A complete woman is probably not a very admirable creature. She is manipulative, uses other people to get her own way, and works within whatever system she is in.”
—Anita Brookner (b. 1938)