Style’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.

Caryatid
Style of Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1620-1684

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

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

Saint Anthony Appearing to a Sick Man
Follower of Domenico Robusti, called Tintoretto Italian, 1560-1635

Reclining Nude
Domenico Robusti, called Tintoretto, or his workshop Italian, 1560-1635

Tabernacle with Man of Sorrows
Circle of Domenico Campagnola Italian, c. 1500-1564

Kylix (Drinking Cup)
Attributed to the Manner of Douris (painter) Greek; Athens

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

Penitent Magdalene
Domenico Maria Canuti Italian, 1625-1684

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

Hampstead, Stormy Sky
In the style of John Constable (English, 1776–1837)

Half-Length Praying Figure
Unknown Italian artist style of Carlo Cignani (Italian, 1628-1719)

Battle Scene with Central Figure on Rearing Horse
possibly Unknown German artist or Style of Luca Giordano (Italian, 1632-1705)

Venetian Atmosphere
James McNeill Whistler, style of American, 1834-1903

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