Garofalo · ca. 1530
Saint Nicholas of Tolentino Reviving a Child
Posters from $15.00 CAD · Canvas from $39.00 CAD
Ships to the US & Canada
Public-domain work from the Metropolitan Museum of Art's open access collection.
Up to 16 × 8 in · landscape
Size
Larger sizes are unavailable for this painting because the source scan's resolution wouldn't print at gallery quality.
Format & finish
Archival cotton canvas stretched over a wooden frame. Ready to hang as-is. No external frame.
Scale next to a 5'10" person
+ tax at checkout
Materials & quality
›Canvas & inks
Giclée-printed on archival cotton canvas with fade-resistant pigment inks, hand-stretched over wooden bars. Gallery-wrapped — ready to hang with no extra frame needed.
›Floater frame
Hand-finished solid wood floater frame in five finishes. The canvas sits inside with a clean shadow gap — the way galleries hang contemporary canvas.
›Posters
Premium archival paper — 200 gsm soft matte or 230 gsm vibrant glossy. Ships flat or rolled, ready for your own frame.
›Faithful to the source
Printed from the highest-resolution museum and archive scans available. Each painting's maximum size is capped at what its source scan can support at gallery quality.
The story of Saint Nicholas of Tolentino Reviving a Child
The companion predella panel to Garofalo's Reviving the Birds, depicting the saint's most famous miracle — restoring life to a child laid out for burial as the parents weep at the bedside. A small intimate scene in the Ferrarese-Renaissance idiom, with the polished surfaces and warm-toned drapery that made Garofalo one of Ferrara's most sought-after altarpiece painters in the first half of the 16th century.
Garofalo
Benvenuto Tisi, also known as Il Garofalo (1481–1559), was a Late-Renaissance Mannerist Italian painter of the School of Ferrara. Garofalo trained with the court of the Duke d'Este before working briefly with Raphael in Rome, and his work synthesises the Roman High Renaissance with the colouristic richness of the Ferrarese tradition. He painted altarpieces, mythological scenes, and portraits across northern Italy for nearly half a century.
All Garofalo prints →Biography adapted from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

