В Художественном музее Денвера (Denver Art Museum) проходит до 31 июля 2011 г. выставка "Восхитительные города: путешествие по Италии эпохи Ренессанса".
Attributed to Andrea d’Assisi, called L’Ingegno (active 1480–1521), Madonna and Child, ca. 1485.
Выставка приглашает посетителей to explore more than 50 paintings, textiles and decorative arts that defined the style that became known as the Italian Renaissance. The artworks and sumptuously designed settings create a “passport to travel” to Italy during the late 15th and early 16th centuries. Visitors have the chance to experience the distinctive creative contribution of each featured city to the birth of the Renaissance style.
“We want to transport our visitors to Renaissance Italy, where cities such as Florence, Venice and Milan played a major role in the development of a new artistic style,” said Angelica Daneo, associate curator of painting and sculpture at the DAM. “During the 1400s and 1500s, Italy was not a unified country, but rather a group of independent states with different characters and artistic backgrounds. The exhibition will show how local styles merged with the innovative ideas coming from Tuscany, resulting in unique artistic expressions and lasting examples of Renaissance art.”
Cities of Splendor guides visitors through Florence, Siena, Mantua, Venice and Milan and across the Italian Alps, enabling them to discover and enjoy the richness of the Italian Renaissance – such as the Florentine love for rational perspective and drawing, the Mantuan passion for classical antiquity and the Venetian taste for color and tonalities. The gallery is a fully immersive experience with Renaissance sights, fabrics and decorative elements.
Josse Lieferinxe, Abraham and the Three Angels, about 1495–1500.
Austrian Master, The Nativity, about 1480. Oil and tempera paint on panel.

Bonifacio Bembo, Adoration of the Magi, about 1455–1460.

Giovanni da Bologna, The Coronation of the Virgin, about 1380.
Follower of Gentile da Fabriano, Annunciation to the Shepherds, early 1400s.
Follower of Leonardo da Vinci, Madonna and Child with Columbines, about 1490. Oil paint on panel; 19-3/8 x 14-7/8 in. Denver Art Museum: Gift of the Samuel H. Kress Foundation
Vincenzo Foppa, Saint Christopher, about 1460.
Domenico Ghirlandaio and Workshop (1448/49–1494), The Coronation of the Virgin with Saint John the Baptist and Saint John the Evangelist, ca. 1478–79.

Jan Provost, The Presentation of the Christ Child in the Temple, about 1525.
Bernardo Zenale, Madonna and Child with Saints, about 1510.
Follower of Andrea Mantegna [Girolamo da Cremona?], The Triumphs of Love, Chastity, and Death, about 1460s.
“Надеюсь, что наши посетители покинут выставку с чувством более глубокого понимания сложности и разнообразия стиля Ренессанса" - сказал Данео, составивший и написавший полный каталог DAM Kress Collection для посетителей.