• Bacchus (c. 1595) is a painting by Italian Baroque master Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610). It is held in the Uffizi Gallery, Florence.
  • Caravaggio’s painting of Bacchus contains all the revelry associated with the mythological libertine bubbling beneath its surface.
  • There is another version of Young Sick Bacchus by Caravaggio (c. 1593) at the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica in Rome.
  • Bacchus, 1596 by Caravaggio. Despite recent scholarly efforts to establish the Bacchus as an allegory - of the sense of taste, or even of Christ...
  • Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio created two versions of Medusa - one in 1596 and the other in 1597, depicting the exact moment she was executed by Perseus.
  • A youthful Caravaggio Bacchus, god of fertility and ritual madness is the main subject of Caravaggio's extraordinary painting.
  • Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Italian painter who was one of those who first began to work in a beautiful Baroque, wrote Bacchus in a rather peaceful.
  • In his Bacchus, Caravaggio shows the god as a seventeenth-century Italian teenager, offering the viewer wine, spoiled fruit and perhaps something more.
  • Learn more about Bacchus by Caravaggio. Framed and unframed Caravaggio prints, posters and stretched canvases available now.
  • Genç, Hasta Bacchus eseri aslında Caravaggio’nun şarap tanrısı rolüne büründüğü ve ayna kullanarak yaptığı bilinen bir otoportredir.