Domenico’s work is defined by its painter sensibility — an enduring influence on generations that followed. Most artists are dead; following is a declaration of love.

Head of a Dominican Nun: Study for the Ecstasy of Saint Dominic
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

Virgin and Child Appearing to Saint Cajetan of Thiene
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

Assumption of the Virgin
After Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

Penitent Magdalene
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

Study for Bacchus or Silenus
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

Caryatid
Style of Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1620-1684

Descent Into Limbo
possibly Style of Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1620-1684

Study for the Allegorical Figure of Earthly Harmony
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625–1684

The Wedding at Cana
Giuseppe Maria Crespi (Italian, 1665–1747)

Venus and Mars with Cupid and the Three Graces in a Landscape
Domenico Tintoretto (Italian, 1560–1635)

Domenico da Gambassi
Andrea del Sarto (Italian, 1486–1530)

The Assumption of the Virgin
El Greco (Doménikos Theotokópoulos; Greek, active in Spain, 1541–1614)

Friendship Quilt
Made for Ella Maria Deacon (American, 1811–94) Mount Holly, New Jersey, United States

Male Nude Seen from the Back
Possibly Domenico Maggiotto Italian, 1713-1794

Portrait of a Man
Antonio Maria Esquivel (Spanish, 1806–1857)

Flight from Pompeii
Giovanni Maria Benzoni (Italian, 1809–1873)

Feast of San Domenico, Cocullo
Chim (David Seymour) American, born Poland, 1911–1956

Battle of the Naked Men
Domenico Campagnola Italian, c. 1500-1564

Jupiter and Callisto
Domenico Vito (Italian, active 1576-1586) after Pierre Milan (French, died 1557) after Francesco Primaticcio (Italian, 1504-1570)

María Izquierdo
Rufino Tamayo (Mexican, 1899–1991)