Antonio’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.

Rapier and Scabbard
Probably Flemish

Gauntlet for the Left Hand
Lucio Piccinino (Italian, active 1575-1595) Milan

Resting
Antonio Mancini (Italian, 1852–1930)

Virgin of the Immaculate Conception
Antonio Maragliano (Italian, 1664–1741) Workshop of Antonio Maragliano (Italian, 1664–1741)

Bust of Paris
Antonio Canova (Italian, 1757–1822)

Head of Medusa
Antonio Canova (Italian, 1757–1822)

Virgin and Child with the Young Saint John the Baptist
Correggio (Antonio Allegri; Italian, 1489–1534)

Kitchen Still Life
Attributed to Paolo Antonio Barbieri (Italian, 1603–1649)

Deposition
Antonio d'Este (Italian, 1754–1837) After Antonio Canova (Italian, 1757–1822)

Battle of the Naked Men
Antonio Pollaiuolo Italian, 1433-1498

Saint Peter Martyr Exorcizing a Woman Possessed by a Devil
Antonio Vivarini (Italian, about 1415–1476/84)

Self-Portrait of the Sculptor Antonio Canova
Workshop of Antonio Canova (Italian, 1757–1822)

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

Machado, plate two from Oda a Lorca
Antonio Frasconi (Uruguayan, born Argentina, 1919-2013) printed by Joe Zirker published by Tamarind Lithography Workshop (American, founded 1960)

Stake, plate five from Oda a Lorca
Antonio Frasconi (Uruguayan, born Argentina, 1919-2013) printed by Bohuslav Horak published by Tamarind Lithography Workshop (American, founded 1960)

Don Quixote
Antonio Frasconi Uruguayan, born Argentina, 1919-2013

The Fall of Phaeton
After a design based on an etching by Antonio Tempesta (1555–1630), The Fall of Phaeton (Phaetontis casus) from Ovid’s Metamorphoses Possibly woven at the workshop of Gabriel Babonneix (born 1756?) at the Manufacture Royale d’Aubusson France, Aubusson

Monster, plate thirteen from Oda a Lorca
Antonio Frasconi (Uruguayan, born Argentina, 1919-2013) printed by Bohuslav Horak published by Tamarind Lithography Workshop (American, founded 1960)

Madonna and Child
Antonio Rossellino (Italian, 1427–1479)

Scarf
Designed by Antoni Tàpies (French, born Spain, 1923-2012) France, Lyon, Maison Abraham Printed for Galerie Adrien Maeght France, Paris