Paolo Veronese (Caliari) Adoration of the Magi, 1570s Oil Painting Reproduction

Title: Adoration of the Magi, 1570s
Painted by: Paolo Veronese (Caliari)
Year: 1570s
Orientation: Portrait
Ad: Order a Adoration of the Magi, 1570s by Paolo Veronese (Caliari) Reproduction
Next paintings
-
Supper at Emmaus 2 -
Judith Receiving the Ancients of Bethulia -
The Marriage Feast at Cana, detail of musicians and dogs, c.1562 -
The Marriage Feast at Cana, detail of banqueting table with man in a green robe and dwarf with a parrot, c.1562 -
Allegory of Love, I -
St. Jerome in Penitence -
Adoration of the Kings -
The Descent from the Cross -
The Eternal Father -
The Beautiful Nani -
Supper at Emmaus 2 -
Judith Receiving the Ancients of Bethulia -
The Marriage Feast at Cana, detail of musicians and dogs, c.1562 -
The Marriage Feast at Cana, detail of banqueting table with man in a green robe and dwarf with a parrot, c.1562 -
Allegory of Love, I -
St. Jerome in Penitence -
Adoration of the Kings -
The Descent from the Cross -
The Eternal Father -
The Beautiful Nani -
Supper at Emmaus 2 -
Judith Receiving the Ancients of Bethulia
Most popular paintings
-
The Feast in the House of Levi -
Allegory of the Battle of Lepanto -
Mars and Venus with Cupid and a Dog -
Mars and Venus -
Jesus and the Centurion -
Arachne or Dialectics (Aracne o la Dialettica) -
The Family of Darius before Alexander the Great (356-23 BC) illustration from Lives of Great Men Told by Great Men, edited by Richard Wilson, c.1920s -
Apollo and Daphne, c.1565-70 -
The Rape of Europa -
Feast in the House of Levi 1573 -
The Feast in the House of Levi -
Allegory of the Battle of Lepanto -
Mars and Venus with Cupid and a Dog -
Mars and Venus -
Jesus and the Centurion -
Arachne or Dialectics (Aracne o la Dialettica) -
The Family of Darius before Alexander the Great (356-23 BC) illustration from Lives of Great Men Told by Great Men, edited by Richard Wilson, c.1920s -
Apollo and Daphne, c.1565-70 -
The Rape of Europa -
Feast in the House of Levi 1573 -
The Feast in the House of Levi -
Allegory of the Battle of Lepanto