Art

Top 10 Greatest Painters in All History

Painting and painters are forever considered a bargain. Our history is packed with painters who add their touch in many sorts of painting. They managed to embody stories, persons, even events. If you are interested in this topic, join us getting acquainted with the top ten greatest painters.

10 Paolo Uccello
He was an Italian painter who was famous for his leading work on visual perspective in art. Giorgio Vasari in his book Lives of the Artists stated that Uccello was fanatical by his interest in perspective and would spend all night in his study attempting to grasp the exact disappearance point. He used perspective to make a feeling of depth in his paintings and not to relate different stories. His most famous works are the three paintings representing the battle of San Romano.

9 GIOTTO DI BONDONE
He was an Italian painter and architect belonged to Florence in the late Middle Ages. He is usually considered the top of large artists who offered a lot to the Italian Renaissance. Giotto’s magnum opus is the decoration of the Scrovegni Chapel in Padua that is named as the Arena Chapel, it is completed in 1305.

8 REMBRANDT VAN RIJN
Van Rijn is considered one of the greatest painters in the European art and the most vital in Dutch history. His achievements in art appeared in a period of great prosperity and cultural attainment that historians call the Dutch Golden Age when Dutch Golden Age painting, though in many ways opposing to the Baroque style that ruled Europe, was very productive and innovative.

7 CLAUDE MONET
He established the French Impressionist painting, and he was the most reliable and prolific practitioner of the movement’s philosophy of stating one’s observations before nature, particularly as applied to plein-air landscape painting. The term “Impressionism” is taken from the name of his painting Impression.

6 CARAVAGGIO
He was an Italian painter working in Rome, Naples, and Sicily. His paintings joined a realistic observation of the human state, with a dramatic employment of lighting, they had a influential influence on Baroque painting.

5 PAUL CÉZANNE
He was a French artist and Post-Impressionist painter who founded the transition from the 19th-century conception of artistic attempt to a fundamentally different world of art in the 20th century. Cézanne’s often recurring brushstrokes are very characteristic and obviously recognizable. He made use of planes of color as well as small brushstrokes that increase to figure complex fields.

4 DIEGO VELÁZQUEZ
He was a Spanish painter who was the principal artist in the court of King Philip IV. He was one of the most significant painters of the Spanish Golden Age. VELÁZQUEZ was a distinctive artist of the contemporary Baroque period, vital as a portrait artist. Adding to many renditions of scenes of historical and cultural implication, he painted scores of portraits of the Spanish royal family.

3 JAN VAN EYCK
He was an Early Netherlandish painter working in Bruges. He is deemed to be one of the most major Northern Renaissance artists of the 15th century. Van Eyck painted both secular as well as religious subject matter, such as commissioned portraits and donor portraits.

2 ALBRECHT DÜRER
He was a German painter belong from Nuremberg. His luxurious woodcuts made him reputation and power across Europe when was just 20, and he has been conservatively seen as the greatest artist of the Northern Renaissance.

1 LEONARDO DA VINCI
He was an Italian painter, sculptor as well as an architect. He is extensively deemed to be one of the most vital painters of all time and the most diversely brilliant person ever to have lived. His genius typified the Renaissance humanist ideal.

 

Mia Johnson

Meet Mia Johnson, a seasoned artist with over 20 years of experience in the art industry. Mia has dedicated her career to following, checking, and critiquing the works of other artists, helping them to hone their craft and reach their full potential. Her passion for art began at a young age, and she went on to study fine arts at the prestigious School of the Art Institute of Chicago. After graduation, Mia worked as a gallery assistant, where she gained valuable experience in the art world and developed a keen eye for spotting emerging talent. She went on to become an art critic for several major publications, including Artforum and Art in America, and has written extensively on contemporary art and culture. Mia is also a sought-after speaker and lecturer, and has given talks at museums, galleries, and universities around the world. In her free time, Mia enjoys painting, drawing, and exploring new art forms and techniques. She is passionate about helping artists of all levels to achieve their goals and reach their full potential, and is always on the lookout for new talent to discover and promote.
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