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    • Chiara

      • His Pietà (1483–1493) in the Uffizi is an uncharacteristically stark work that avoids Perugino's sometimes too easy sentimental piety. According to Vasari, Perugino was to return to Florence in September 1493 to marry Chiara, daughter of architect Luca Fancelli.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pietro_Perugino
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  2. According to Vasari, Perugino was to return to Florence in September 1493 to marry Chiara, daughter of architect Luca Fancelli. The same year, Perugino made Florence his permanent home once again, though he continued to accept some work elsewhere. Later career

  3. Perugino (born c. 1450, Città della Pieve, near Perugia, Romagna [Italy]—died February/March 1523, Fontignano, near Perugia) was an Italian Renaissance painter of the Umbria school and the teacher of Raphael.

    • Peter J. Murray
  4. Sep 17, 2020 · Web Gallery of Art (Public Domain) Sometime between 1500 and 1504 CE, Perugino was given what must have been a most satisfying commission, a painting for the cathedral of his home town. The subject of this work, now in the Musée de Beaux-Arts in Caen, France, is the marriage of Joseph and Mary.

    • Mark Cartwright
  5. Aug 15, 2023 · Pietro Perugino, The Marriage of the Virgin, 1501-1504, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Caen, France. We can split Perugino’s painting into two parts, vertically and horizontally. Mary and the women are on the right, in the foreground, while Joseph and the men are on the left.

  6. In 1493, Perugino married Chiara Fancelli, the daughter of an architect, Luca Fancelli. She would become his Muse, inspiring him for Virgin Mary’s face in his sacred paintings during the following years.

  7. By the end of his life, however, his sweet light manner, unchanging from the 1490s, had been surpassed by his most important associate, Raphael, and by Leonardo himself. Pietro Vanucci was born in Città della Pieve and was called Perugino after the town of Perugia, where he worked.

  8. The Musée des Beaux-Arts in Caen has agreed to lend Perugino’s large altarpiece, which will be returning to Italy for the first time in over two hundred years, in exchange for Brera’s Caravaggio masterpiece depicting the Supper at Emmaus (from November 2015 to January 2016).

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