ArtAtlas

Where to See Art: 41 Artist Pages

ArtAtlas locates paintings, sculptures and frescoes in the museums, churches and cities where they actually are. Each artist page below maps every major work, tells you what each site holds, and gives you the booking links you need to skip the queues.

Forty-one artists covered from Giotto to Warhol, with dedicated city sub-pages for the densest concentrations: Caravaggio in Rome, Michelangelo in Florence, Klimt in Vienna, and more.

Selection of artworks mapped on ArtAtlas: from Michelangelo's David to Caravaggio's Judith

These are the artists with dedicated editorial pages. The full dataset includes hundreds more: open the global map and search by name or city.

  • c. 1267–1337 · Medieval

    Giotto

    Scrovegni Chapel frescoes (Padua), Bardi and Peruzzi Chapels in Santa Croce (Florence), Ognissanti Madonna at the Uffizi.

  • c. 1415–1492 · Renaissance

    Piero della Francesca

    Resurrection and San Giuliano (Museo Civico, Sansepolcro), Legend of the True Cross cycle (Basilica di San Francesco, Arezzo), Portraits of the Dukes of Urbino (Uffizi), Flagellation and Madonna di Senigallia (Galleria Nazionale, Urbino).

  • 1401–1428 · Renaissance

    Masaccio

    Expulsion from Eden and Tribute Money (Brancacci Chapel, Florence), Holy Trinity (Santa Maria Novella), Madonna and Child with Saint Anne (Uffizi).

  • c. 1386–1466 · Renaissance

    Donatello

    Bronze David and St. George (Bargello, Florence), Penitent Magdalene (Opera del Duomo, Florence), High Altar bronzes (Basilica di Sant'Antonio, Padua).

  • 1397–1475 · Renaissance

    Paolo Uccello

    Battle of San Romano (Uffizi, National Gallery London, Louvre), equestrian fresco of Sir John Hawkwood (Florence Cathedral).

  • 1445–1510 · Renaissance

    Botticelli

    Primavera and Birth of Venus (Uffizi, rooms 10–14), Sistine Chapel frescoes (Vatican), Annunciation (Uffizi).

  • 1452–1519 · Renaissance

    Leonardo

    Last Supper (Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan), Annunciation and Adoration of the Magi (Uffizi), Mona Lisa and Virgin of the Rocks (Louvre), Musician (Pinacoteca Ambrosiana, Milan).

  • c. 1431–1506 · Renaissance

    Mantegna

    Camera degli Sposi frescoes (Palazzo Ducale, Mantua), Dead Christ (Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan), Ovetari Chapel remains (Eremitani, Padua), Triumphs of Caesar (Hampton Court, London).

  • 1503–1540 · Renaissance

    Parmigianino

    Madonna with the Long Neck (Uffizi), Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna), Steccata frescoes (Parma).

  • 1494–1557 · Renaissance / Mannerism

    Pontormo

    Deposition (Capponi Chapel, Santa Felicita, Florence), Visitation (San Michele, Carmignano), Passion cycle lunettes (Certosa del Galluzzo, Florence).

  • 1483–1520 · Renaissance

    Raphael

    School of Athens and Stanze (Vatican, Rome), Madonna of the Goldfinch (Uffizi), Deposition (Galleria Borghese), Marriage of the Virgin (Brera, Milan), La Muta (Galleria Nazionale, Urbino).

  • c. 1488–1576 · Renaissance

    Titian

    Assumption of the Virgin (Basilica dei Frari, Venice), Venus of Urbino (Uffizi), Sacred and Profane Love (Galleria Borghese), Charles V at Mühlberg (Prado, Madrid).

  • 1475–1564 · Renaissance

    Michelangelo

    David (Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence), Sistine Chapel ceiling and Last Judgment (Vatican, Rome), Pietà (St. Peter's, Rome), Medici tombs (San Lorenzo, Florence), Rondanini Pietà (Castello Sforzesco, Milan).

  • c. 1499–1546 · Renaissance / Mannerism

    Giulio Romano

    Sala dei Giganti and Sala di Psiche frescoes (Palazzo Te, Mantua), Vatican Stanze contributions, Holy Family (Louvre).

  • 1497–1543 · Northern Renaissance

    Holbein

    The Ambassadors (National Gallery, London), portraits of Henry VIII (National Portrait Gallery, London), Dead Christ in the Tomb (Kunstmuseum Basel).

  • c. 1450–1516 · Northern Renaissance

    Bosch

    Prado (Madrid), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Palazzo Ducale (Venice).

  • 1746–1828 · Modern precursor

    Goya

    Prado (Madrid), Real Academia de Bellas Artes, Louvre.

  • 1775–1851 · Romanticism

    Turner

    Tate Britain (London), National Gallery, Courtauld Gallery.

  • 1884–1920 · Modern

    Modigliani

    Musée d'Art Moderne (Paris), Tate Modern, MOMA (New York).

  • 1840–1926 · Impressionism

    Monet

    Musée de l'Orangerie and Orsay (Paris), Giverny, National Gallery (London).

  • 1853–1890 · Post-Impressionism

    Van Gogh

    Van Gogh Museum (Amsterdam), Orsay (Paris), MOMA (New York).

  • 1881–1973 · Modern / Cubism

    Picasso

    Museu Picasso (Barcelona), Reina Sofia (Madrid), MOMA (New York).

  • 1862–1918 · Symbolism / Secession

    Klimt

    Belvedere (Vienna), Kunsthistorisches Museum, Neue Galerie (New York).

  • 1863–1944 · Expressionism

    Munch

    National Museum (Oslo), Munch Museum (Oslo), Orsay (Paris).

  • 1879–1940 · Modern / Bauhaus

    Klee

    Zentrum Paul Klee (Bern), Lenbachhaus (Munich), MOMA (New York).

  • 1866–1944 · Abstraction / Bauhaus

    Kandinsky

    Lenbachhaus (Munich), Guggenheim (New York), Centre Pompidou (Paris).

  • 1880–1916 · Expressionism

    Franz Marc

    Lenbachhaus (Munich), Städel (Frankfurt), National Gallery (Berlin).

  • 1887–1985 · Modern

    Chagall

    Musée National Marc Chagall (Nice), Centre Pompidou (Paris), MOMA.

  • 1912–1956 · Abstract Expressionism

    Pollock

    MOMA (New York), Peggy Guggenheim (Venice), Tate Modern (London).

  • 1909–1992 · Modern

    Francis Bacon

    Hugh Lane Gallery (Dublin), Tate Modern, Centre Pompidou (Paris).

  • 1928–1987 · Pop Art

    Warhol

    Andy Warhol Museum (Pittsburgh), MOMA (New York), Tate Modern.

How each artist page works

Interactive map

Locate every major work

Each artist page embeds an ArtAtlas map filtered by artist. You can see at a glance how the works are distributed across cities, which museums cluster together, and how to build a route that makes geographic sense rather than following a random list of highlights.

Practical information

What each site holds, and how to visit

Every site card tells you the specific works on display, opening hours, whether advance booking is required, and links to buy tickets where relevant. No generic descriptions: only information that is useful before you go.

City pages

Read artists across cities

Several artists have dedicated city pages (Michelangelo in Florence, Caravaggio in Rome, Botticelli in Florence) that go deeper into itinerary planning for a single urban concentration. Use them when a city holds enough works to deserve a full visit on their own.

Hundreds of artists. One map.

Every artist page connects to the same ArtAtlas map, which means you can move from an artist view to a city view to a museum view without losing your bearings. If you are planning a trip to Florence, Rome, or any major European city, the map shows you not only where to find the works you already know, but what else is worth your time in the same building, the same neighbourhood, or the same city.