Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, August 30, 1727 – March 3, 1804, was an Italian painter, printmaker, and draftsman.
He was the son and pupil of Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and worked with him in Venice, Würzburg, and Madrid. His independent work includes religious paintings, frescoes, genre scenes, and drawings.
His late work is especially associated with Punchinello subjects and the frescoes from the Villa Zianigo, now at Ca’ Rezzonico in Venice.
The Women of Darius Invoking the Clemency of Alexander, 1750
Oil on canvas, 46.6 x 38.8 in
Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit
Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery, 1752
Oil on canvas, 28.6 x 41.3 in
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles
The Minuet, 1756
Oil on canvas, 31.8 x 43 in
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
Head of an Old Man, c 1756
Oil on canvas, 26 x 20.3 in
Städel Museum, Frankfurt, Germany
The Tiepolo Family, c 1762
Oil on canvas, 26.3 x 37.8 in
Private Collection
Little Italian Greyhound, 1791–1793
Fresco, 33.3 x 40 in
Ca' Rezzonico, Venice
The Swing of the Polichinelles, 1793
Fresco
Ca' Rezzonico, Venice
Polichinelles in Love, 1797
Fresco
Ca' Rezzonico, Venice
Polichinelles at Rest, 1797
Fresco
Ca' Rezzonico, Venice
The Baptism of the Emperor Constantine, c 1770
Etching, 16 x 8.5 in
Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH
The Acrobatic Shed, 1797
Fresco
Ca' Rezzonico, Venice
Punchinello with the Ostriches, c 1800
Pen and light brown ink and brush wash over black chalk on laid paper, 11.6 x 16.3 in
Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH
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