Angelino Medoro (1567–1631) was an Italian painter, active in Latin America. His work in the Viceroyalty of Peru was greatly influential on the Cuzco School art movement.[1][2]
^"Medoro, Angelino". Proyecto Estudios Indianos. Universidad del Pacífico, Universidad de Navarra. 2022. Retrieved 2022-08-25.
^Mesa, José de; Gisbert, Teresa (1982). Historia de la pintura cuzqueña (in Spanish). Fundación A.N. Wiese. pp. 78–79.
AngelinoMedoro (1567–1631) was an Italian painter, active in Latin America. His work in the Viceroyalty of Peru was greatly influential on the Cuzco...
cartographer Angelino Fons (1936–2011), Spanish film director and screenwriter Angelino Garzón, former Vice President of Colombia AngelinoMedoro (1567–1631)...
Medoro may refer to: AngelinoMedoro (1567–1631), Italian painter Medoro from Angelica and Medoro, popular subject of many works of Romantic painters...
Seville, spent most of his life in colonial Colombia, also the Italian AngelinoMedoro, lived in Colombia and Peru, and left works of art preserved in several...
Mora or in the canvases of the Italians Mateo Pérez de Alesio and AngelinoMedoro, the Spaniards Francisco Bejarano and J. de Illescas and the Creole...
painter Luis de Riaño, born in Lima and a disciple of Italian artist AngelinoMedoro. In the words of the Bolivian historians José de Mesa and Teresa Gisbert...
Mora or in the canvases of the Italians Mateo Pérez de Alesio and AngelinoMedoro, the Spaniards Francisco Bejarano and J. de Illescas and the Creole...
It highlighted the work of Luis de Riaño, disciple of the Italian AngelinoMedoro, author of the murals of the Church of San Pedro, Andahuaylillas. It...
within this colonial-era include works by Antonio Acero de la Cruz, AngelinoMedoro, Jan van Kessel the Elder, Jan Brueghel the Younger, Giovanni Francesco...
artist; de Riaño, a painter from Lima, had trained in the workshop of AngelinoMedoro, and so would have provided another source of Italian influence. Quispe...
colonial art in Chile. Among its exponents were the Italian painters AngelinoMedoro, Bernardo Bitti and Mateo Perez de Alessio who brought the first engravings...
followed in his footsteps to South America – including Matteo Pérez and AngelinoMedoro immediately in his year of arrival – few became as influential as Bitti...