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A good example of this openess is Titian’s Venus from 1538. Titian became court painter of the Hapsburg Court of Charles V, and he helped to spread the ideas and techniques of the Venetian School across Europe. Among the other great painters that lived and worked in the Republic were Tintoretto (1518–1594), and he helped to develop the Mannerist School which prefigured Baroque Art.
Venice also had an extraordinary architectural tradition represented in both St Mark’s Cathedral and the piazza. Many great architects worked in the city in the sixteenth century such as the great Palladio who is one of the most significant Venetians architects of all time. There also emerged a school of sculpture in the city that interpreted the classical tradition in a poetic and sensitive style. Venice made a significant contribution to art, architecture, and sculpture especially in the 16th century and it is regarded as one of the great centers of the Renaissance, the equal of Rome and Florence. Moreover, the city was to become one of the centers of European art until the 18th century .<ref>Brown, Patricia Fortini. Painting and history in Renaissance Venice (London, Blackwell, 1984), p 113</ref>.
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