Top 50 — Religious Painters

Top 50 famous religious painters: divine art

Fra Angelico, Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael Sanzio and other essential figures in the ranking

This guide brings together 50 artists to situate Religious Painters in the history of painting: influences, landmark works, distinctive gestures and links to available collections.

Wikimedia CommonsWikidataMuseum collectionsAlpha Reproduction
50 biographical entries reviewed and structured
2026 editorial update
2 images sourced by artist when available
2026 edition Michel-Ange — The Creation of'Adam, détail de la chapelle Sixtine
50
Artists

Alpha Reproduction editorial ranking

Context

What makes these painters essential?

This ranking is not an athletic leaderboard. It serves as a reading map: understanding the major artists, their lineages, their landmark works, and the way each name continues to matter in the visual imagination.

The entries favor clear, embodied, and verifiable writing. Each artist is presented with biographical landmarks, their pictorial gesture, an emblematic work, and, when available, an associated collection of reproductions.

The ranks help navigate the page. They take nothing away from painters placed lower: some are founders, others are transmitters, heirs, or peripheral figures without which the movement would lose part of its depth.

Selection #1 to #10

Landmarks, lineages and works to know

This section brings together ranks 1 to 10. It allows you to explore the movement step by step, keeping together the artists who share the same family of forms, subjects or influence.

#1Fra Angelico

1400–1455 · Florentine Republic · Italian Renaissance

#2Michelangelo

1475–1564 · Florentine Republic · High Renaissance

#3Leonardo da Vinci

1452–1519 · Florentine Republic · High Renaissance

#4Raphael Sanzio

1483–1520 · Holy Roman Empire · Italian Renaissance

#5Giotto di Bondone

1267–1337 · Italy · Pre-Renaissance

#6Caravaggio

1571-1610 · Duchy of Milan · Baroque

#7El Greco

1541–1614 · not specified · Western painting

#8Tiziano Vecellio

1488–1576 · Republic of Venice · Venetian School

#9Jan van Eyck

1390–1441 · Southern Netherlands · Flemish Primitives

#10Rogier van der Weyden

1390–1464 · Burgundian Netherlands · Flemish Primitives

Selection #11 to #20

Milestones, Lineages and Must-Know Works

This section brings together ranks 11 to 20. It allows you to explore the movement step by step, keeping together the artists who share a common family of forms, subjects, or influence.

#11Duccio di Buoninsegna

1255–1319 · Siena · Italian Gothic

#12Cimabue

1240–1302 · Florence · Italo-Byzantine

#13Masaccio

1401–1428 · Florentine Republic · Italian Renaissance

#14Piero della Francesca

1415–1492 · Florentine Republic · Early Renaissance

#15Sandro Botticelli

1445–1510 · Italy · Early Renaissance

#16Albrecht Dürer

1471–1528 · Duchy of Bavaria · German Renaissance

#17Matthias Grünewald

1470–1528 · Holy Roman Empire · German Renaissance

#18Hieronymus Bosch

1450–1516 · Northern Netherlands · Flemish Primitives

#19Pieter Bruegel the Elder

1525–1569 · Duchy of Brabant · Flemish Renaissance

#20Jacopo Tintoretto

1518–1594 · Republic of Venice · Mannerism

Selection #21 to #30

Landmarks, lineages, and key works to know

This section gathers ranks 21 to 30. It allows you to move through the movement step by step, keeping together the artists who share a common family of forms, subjects, or influence.

#21Paul Veronese

1528–1588 · Republic of Venice · Mannerism

#22Giovanni Bellini

1430–1516 · Republic of Venice · Renaissance

#23Fra Filippo Lippi

1406–1469 · Florentine Republic · Renaissance

#24Domenico Ghirlandaio

1448–1494 · Florentine Republic · Italian Renaissance

#25Andrea Mantegna

1431–1506 · Republic of Venice · Italian Renaissance

#26Antonello da Messina

1430–1479 · Kingdom of Sicily · Early Renaissance

#27Antonio da Correggio

1489–1534 · Signoria of Correggio · Renaissance

#28Pietro Perugino

1448–1523 · Italy · Umbrian School

#29Luca Signorelli

1450–1523 · Florentine Republic · Sienese school

#30Hans Memling

1430-1494 · Flanders · Early Netherlandish

Selection #31 to #40

Landmarks, lineages and works to know

This section brings together ranks 31 to 40. It allows you to explore the movement in stages, keeping together the artists who share the same family of forms, subjects, or influence.

#31Hugo van der Goes

1440-1482 · Flanders · Early Netherlandish

#32Robert Campin

1375-1444 · Flanders · Early Netherlandish

#33Dirk Bouts

1415-1475 · Burgundian Netherlands · Flemish Primitives

#34Simone Martini

1284-1344 · Siena · International Gothic

#35Ambrogio Lorenzetti

1290-1348 · Siena · Italian Gothic

#36Annibale Carracci

1560-1609 · Papal States · Baroque

#37Guido Reni

1575-1642 · Papal States · baroque

#38Guercino

1591-1666 · Papal States · baroque

#39Domenichino

1581-1641 · Papal States · baroque

#40Artemisia Gentileschi

1593-1653 · Papal States · baroque

Selection #41 to #50

Landmarks, lineages and works to know

This section brings together ranks 41 to 50. It lets you explore the movement step by step, keeping together the artists who share the same family of forms, subjects, or influence.

#41Peter Paul Rubens

1577-1640 · Spanish Netherlands · Baroque

#42Rembrandt van Rijn

1606-1669 · United Provinces · Baroque

#43Georges de La Tour

1593-1652 · Duchy of Lorraine · Baroque

#44Jusepe de Ribera

1591-1652 · Crown of Aragon · Baroque

#45Francisco de Zurbarán

1598-1664 · Spain · baroque

#46Bartolomé Esteban Murillo

1617-1682 · Spain · baroque

#47Gustave Doré

1832-1883 · French · romanticism

#48William Blake

1757-1827 · British · romanticism

#49James Tissot

1836-1902 · France · Victorian Realism

#50Raja Ravi Varma

1848-1906 · India · Indian Academicism

Continue the visit with images

A great movement is better understood when you can compare the artworks, formats, and colors. Alpha Reproduction reproductions let you extend this visit at home, with special attention paid to details, contrasts, and original formats.

0 comments

Leave a comment

Please note that comments must be approved before they are published.