Carlo Crivelli was an Italian Renaissance painter known for his conservative Late Gothic decorative style. Born in Venice, he spent his career in the Veneto and Ancona. His work is characterized by a remarkable precision of naturalistic detail, often inspired by contemporary Flemish painting. One of Crivelli’s notable works is “Madonna and Child,” dating to around 1480. The painting features excessive symbolic detail. For example, the apples and fly in the painting are symbols of sin and evil, while the cucumber and the goldfinch are symbols of redemption. Crivelli also introduces illusory elements that attempt to betray the imaginary space of the artwork by drawing attention to the fact that the work is merely a constructed image.
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