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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Veronese

Veronese \Ver`o*nese"\, a. [It. Veronese.] Of or pertaining to Verona, in Italy. -- n. sing. & pl. A native of Verona; collectively, the people of Verona.

Wikipedia
Veronese

Veronese is the Italian word denoting someone or something from Verona, Italy and may refer to:

  • Veronese Riddle, a popular riddle in the Middle Ages
  • Veronese (moth), a moth genus in the family Crambidae
  • Monte Veronese, an Italian cheese made from cow’s milk
  • the Veronese embedding of a projective space by a complete linear system

Usage examples of "veronese".

She stood with bowed head and clasped hands as he approached her, her hair falling unbound, as in her maiden days, over the simply white robe which she had preferred in her illness, discarding all her jewels and all emblems of her state--pale as a vision, like a sad dream of the beautiful Madonna del Sorriso which the Veronese had painted for that altar of the Servi at which, each morning, Fra Paolo still dutifully ministered.

With an impatient gesture the Veronese indicated his choice, and they were soon on their way.

The Veronese also bared his head and made the sign of reverence, for they were passing the island of San Michele, toward which a mournful procession of boats, each with its torch and its banner of black, was slowly gliding, while back over the water echoed the dirge from those sobbing cellos.

Yet he had himself acquiesced in her quiet but inflexible showing of the futility of attempting such an overturning of Giustiniani traditions, though he still went with dangerous frequency to the studio of the Veronese, to which she had procured him entrance upon his promise that he would not seriously consider that impossible possibility at which he had hinted.

After Fra Paolo had left the studio the Veronese was still studying his picture, pleased and serious, feeling that this man, who was not an artist, had comprehended the deepest mood in which he had ever approached his art, when Marina entered.

Great as was his fame in those days,--and the Veronese never lived beyond his fame,--still, as in his earlier years, he was eager for any new method of proving the genius in which his own faith was as unbounded as his capacity to achieve was vigorous and tireless.

The Veronese alone knew of his intention, and as to his father--he could only put him out of his thoughts.

It affected the school of Venice in matters of drawing, beside influencing the Lombard and Veronese schools in their beginnings.

Pisanello, was the earliest painter of note, but he was not distinctly Veronese in his art.

Liberale da Verona, Giorgione, Bonifazio Veronese, and later, even by Giulio Romano.

With an art founded on Paolo Veronese, he produced decorative ceilings and panels of high quality, with wonderful invention, a limpid brush, and a light flaky color peculiarly appropriate to the walls of churches and palaces.

Liberale, really belongs to the next century--the High Renaissance--but his early works show his education in Veronese and Paduan methods.

Something of the Paolo Veronese cast of mind, he conceived things largely, and painted them proportionately--large Titanic types, broad schemes and masses of color, great sweeping lines of beauty.

At the time his palette had been reduced to a few, extremely vivid colors: cadmium yellow and red, Veronese green, emerald, cobalt, cobalt-violet, French vermilion, and crimson lake.

Among these relics of an age more happy in this respect than that of which we write, the connoisseur would readily have known the pencils of Titian, Paul Veronese, and Tintoretto--the three great names in which the subjects of St.