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    • Michelangelo. Birth year: 1475. Death year: 1564. City/province of birth: Tuscany. Notable characteristics/subject matter: Physical realism, use of light, space, and shadow.
    • Sandro Botticelli. Birth year: 1445. Death year: 1510. City/province of birth: Florence. Notable characteristics/subject matter: Portraits, religious themes, mythology.
    • Caravaggio. Birth year: 1571. Death year: 1610. City/province of birth: Milan. Notable characteristics/subject matter: Still lifes, religious themes, mythology.
    • Titian. Birth year: 1488. Death year: 1576. City/province of birth: Pieve di Cadore. Notable characteristics/subject matter: Portraits, religious themes, mythical landscapes.
  1. For centuries, Italians have left an unmistakable imprint on the American continent, the United States as a nation, and the state of California. Amerigo Vespucci, a Florentine explorer and...

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    • Frank Sinatra
    • Mother Cabrini
    • Joe Dimaggio
    • Enrico Fermi
    • Lucky Luciano
    • Mario Puzo
    • Lee Iacocca
    • Geraldine Ferraro
    • Anthony Fauci
    • Antonin Scalia

    People may remember Frank Sinatra for hits like "My Way," his Oscar-winning performance in From Here to Eternity and his adventures with the Rat Pack. More than that, the proud son of Italian immigrants arguably did more than any other individual to shape the course of American entertainment and popular culture after World War II. He became the fir...

    Born outside Milan in 1850, Francis Xavier Cabrini heeded the request of Pope Leo XIII and moved to the U.S. in the late 1880s to serve the millions of Italian immigrants who were flocking to its shores. She founded her first American orphanage in upstate New York in 1890 but refused to stay put, fielding calls to help the abandoned, sick and desti...

    While not facing the outright discrimination endured by African Americans, Italian American baseball players weathered their share of ethnically charged abuse in the early 20th century. Such stereotyping was apparent in a 1939 Life profile of Joe DiMaggio, which made sure to note that the New York Yankees star "never reeks of garlic." But DiMaggio ...

    In 1938, Enrico Fermi was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on radioactivity and the discovery of new elements. But a career highlight for most was just the beginning for the University of Rome physicist who, after defecting to the U.S. to escape the regime of Benito Mussolini, oversaw the first controlled nuclear chain reaction in Ch...

    One could choose from a lengthy list of Italian-speaking racketeers who loom large in American culture, but it was Lucky Lucianowho made the biggest imprint by establishing the template for modern organized crime in the States. Born Salvatore Lucania in Sicily in 1897, Luciano came of age in New York City's Lower East Side and put his talents to us...

    If Luciano created the blueprint for organized crime, then Mario Puzo is responsible for igniting the public's love affair with the subject thanks to the 1969 publication of The Godfather. Raised in the gritty Manhattan neighborhood of Hell's Kitchen, Puzo saw plenty of tough guys run the streets but had no personal experience with gang activity. N...

    The only individual to lead modern-day operations of two of the Big Three American automakers, Lee Iacocca followed a classic rags-to-riches storyline to become one of the most celebrated executives of his era. Born Lido Iacocca to a hot dog vendor who was decimated by the Great Depression, he took an engineering degree to a sales position with For...

    A schoolteacher turned criminal prosecutor and congresswoman from Queens, Geraldine Ferraro entered the limelight in 1984 by joining Democratic presidential hopeful Walter Mondale to become the first woman and Italian American to earn the vice-presidential nomination on a major party ticket. But her time as a political power player was short-lived....

    In 1981, nearly 40 years before he became a ubiquitous media presence during the onset of COVID-19, Dr. Anthony Fauciof the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases learned of a strange new sickness within the gay community. He plunged himself into the research of HIV/AIDS despite a lack of bureaucratic support, taking the important st...

    The first Italian American named to the United States Supreme Court, Antonin Scalia was a giant of the conservative movement that took shape during the Reagan administration. Scalia changed history by the very nature of his position, from his vote to end the 2000 presidential recount that handed the election to George W. Bush to his determination t...

    • Da Vinci. Leonardo da Vinci, born in Tuscany, Italy in 1452, was a man fascinated by everything from drawing and sculpture to architecture and engineering.
    • Michelangelo. Michelangelo Buonarotti was born in 1475 Florence, Italy. With an early interest in painting, he began an apprenticeship with Domenico Ghirlandaio at the age of thirteen but left after one year due to his aptitude and quick learning.
    • Raphael. Raphael Sanzio was born in 1483 in Urbino, Italy the son of a painter. Learning from his father, he took up painting, and, after his father’s death when he was only eleven, he took over his father’s workshop where his success quickly surpassed his father’s.
    • Giotto. Giotto di Bondone is cited as one of the first renaissance artists and was a pivotal individual in the deviation from the byzantine style of art.
    • Mona Lisa – Leonardo da Vinci. The Mona Lisa is arguably the most well-known artwork in the world, and her grin is instantly recognizable around the globe.
    • The School of Athens – Raphael. Raphael’s fresco The School of Athens hangs in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican and dates from 1509–1511. Practically every major Greek philosopher is represented in this artwork.
    • The Birth of Venus – Sandro Botticelli. The Birth of Venus, one of Botticelli’s finest Renaissance works of art, depicts the Roman goddess Venus being delivered to land on a large shell after being born fully grown at sea.
    • Venus of Urbino – Titian. An oil painting, sometimes known as Reclining Venus or Venus of Urbino, The Venus of Urbino was likely begun in 1532 or 1534, completed in 1534, and sold in 1538.
  3. Oct 3, 2013 · Italians Come to America. By Rachel Cohen. October 3, 2013 11:06am. View Gallery 5 Images. In the eventful year of 1913, Art in America was founded and more than 70,000 people saw Marcel Duchamp ...

  4. Oct 30, 2018 · 10 most famous Italian paintings including The Birth of Venus, Mona Lisa, The Creation of Adam, The School of Athens and The Calling of St Matthew.

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