Search The Collection
Filter By
Object Type / Material
Geographic Location
Date / Era
Department
Show Only:
- As part of the Met's Open Access policy, you can freely copy, modify and distribute this image, even for commercial purposes.API
Public domain data for this object can also be accessed using the Met's Open Access API
Objects with changed or unknown ownership in continental Europe between 1933-1945. Learn more
Showing 24 results for Façon de venise, probably Barcelona
Sort by:

Façon de venise, probably Barcelona
ca. 1500

Façon de Venise, probably south Lowlands or Germany
17th century

Façon de venise, possibly Spanish (Barcelona)
17th century

Façon de Venise, probably Bohemian
late 16th century

Façon de Venise, probably Bohemian
late 16th century

Italian (Venice) or façon de Venise
probably 16th century

Spanish, probably Barcelona (Façon de Venise)
18th century

Façon de Venise, northern European
probably 17th century, possibly late 19th century

Façon de Venise, probably southern Germany or Tyrol
1592

Venetian or façon de Venise, probably Tyrolean; possibly Venice
ca. 1570

Façon de Venise, probably south Lowlands or Germany
probably 17th century, possibly 19th century

Italian (Venice) or façon de Venise, probably south Lowlands
late 16th–early 17th century

Façon de Venise, probably northern European (Lowlands or France)
early 17th century

probably façon de Venise, northern European or Venetian
late 16th–mid-17th century

Venetian or façon de Venise, probably Tyrol (Innsbruck)
mid to late 16th century

Venetian or façon de Venise, probably south Lowlands or Germany
late 16th or early 17th century

Venetian or façon de Venise, probably south Lowlands or Germany
late 16th or early 17th century

Spanish, probably Catalonia, façon de Venise
16th-17th century

possibly Italian, Venice (Murano) or possibly French, façon de Venise
18th–19th century

El Greco (Domenikos Theotokopoulos)
ca. 1599–1600

Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo
ca. 1755

ca. 1480–90

Rembrandt (Rembrandt van Rijn)
ca. 1654

'Ali ibn Muhammad al-Barmaki
ca. 1329–35