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Italian · 1571–1610 · Baroque
Killed a man over a tennis match, fled Rome, and spent his last four years painting on the run. His use of light changed European painting permanently.
Read full biography →Caravaggio's works are held in 27 museums worldwide, including Galleria Borghese, Gemäldegalerie Berlin, and Borghese Collection.
Caravaggio paintings: where to start
Searchers looking for Caravaggio paintings usually want works by city and museum, not only a worldwide list.
Start with Rome for the densest Caravaggio itinerary, then compare Naples, Florence, London, Vienna, Madrid, and other museum holdings in the cards below.
For each museum, check the official collection page before travelling: Caravaggio works are regularly loaned, conserved, or moved between permanent-display rooms and special exhibitions.
🇦🇹 Austria
1 museum
-
3 works
Kunsthistorisches Museum
Maria-Theresien-Platz, Austria
Tue–Sun 10:00–18:00 (Thu until 21:00); closed Mon (open Mon Jun–Aug)€21 adults, free under-19Museumsquartier (U2)Confirm on museum website before visiting.
🇧🇪 Belgium
1 museum
- 1 works
Liege Fine Arts Museum
Féronstrée et Hors-Château, Belgium
🇫🇷 France
2 museums
- 5 works
Borghese Collection
Paris, France
-
3 works
Louvre
Paris, France
Wed–Mon 09:00–18:00 (Fri until 21:45); closed Tue€22 adults, free under-18Palais-Royal – Musée du Louvre (1, 7)Confirm on museum website before visiting.
🇩🇪 Germany
3 museums
-
7 works
Gemäldegalerie Berlin
Berlin, Germany
- 3 works
Munich Central Collecting Point
Munich, Germany
-
1 works
Bode Museum
Berlin, Germany
🇮🇪 Ireland
1 museum
- 2 works
National Gallery of Ireland
Dublin, Ireland
Also here
🇮🇹 Italy
11 museums
-
5 works
Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica
Rome, Italy
- 4 works
San Luigi dei Francesi
Ponte, Italy
-
3 works
Galleria Palatina
Palazzo Pitti, Italy
-
3 works
Galleria Doria Pamphilj
Rome, Italy
-
3 works
Uffizi Gallery
borough 1, Italy
Also hereRaphael (23)Sandro Botticelli (22)Cristofano dell'Altissimo (20)Agnolo Bronzino (19)Alessandro Allori (13)Leonardo da Vinci (13) -
2 works
Fondazione Roberto Longhi
Florence, Italy
-
2 works
Capitoline Museums
Rome, Italy
-
2 works
Regional museum of Messina
Messina, Italy
Also here - 1 works
Pinacoteca di Brera
Palazzo Brera, Italy
🇪🇸 Spain
2 museums
-
2 works
Museo del Prado
Madrid city, Spain
Mon–Sat 10:00–20:00, Sun 10:00–19:00€15 adults, free last 2 hours dailyBanco de España (2 (Línea Roja))Confirm on museum website before visiting. -
1 works
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Palace of Villahermosa, Spain
🇺🇦 Ukraine
1 museum
-
2 works
Odesa Museum of Western and Eastern Art
historical city centre of Odesa, Ukraine
Also here
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
2 museums
-
3 works
National Gallery
Trafalgar Square, United Kingdom
Daily 10:00–18:00 (Fri until 21:00)FreeCharing Cross (Bakerloo, Northern)Confirm on museum website before visiting. - 2 works
Royal Collection
London, United Kingdom
Thu–Sun 10:00–17:30 (seasonal; closed during State Rooms open weeks)£19 adults, £12 under-25Victoria (Victoria, Circle, District)Confirm on museum website before visiting.
🇺🇸 United States
3 museums
-
3 works
Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States
Sun–Tue, Thu 10:00–17:00; Fri–Sat 10:00–21:00; closed WedAdults $30, students $17 (pay-what-you-wish for NY residents)86 St (4, 5, 6)Confirm on museum website before visiting. -
2 works
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Kansas City, United States
- 1 works
Princeton University
Princeton, United States
Frequently Asked Questions
Where can I see Caravaggio paintings?
Caravaggio's works can be seen at Galleria Borghese, Gemäldegalerie Berlin, Borghese Collection, and 2 other museums worldwide.When did Caravaggio live?
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio was born in 1571, probably in Milan. Caravaggio died in July 1610.Is Caravaggio renaissance?
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio played a critical role in the formation of a modern approach to painting. His art marks a new, more complex stage of development during the years around 1600, comparable to the novelties introduced in literature by Cervantes or Shakespeare.Did Caravaggio use a camera obscura?
The idea that Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio used some kind of lens or camera obscura is refuted. Early writers do not mention any such device, and nothing like it appears in his belongings.Who was Caravaggio influenced by?
Borromeo's teaching inspired Milanese artists to develop a stark, emotional painting devoid of sensual niceties. This teaching called for a clear and direct art showing proper decorum that induces the viewer to piety.Why did Caravaggio kill?
The reason Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio killed Ranuccio Tomassoni is not definitively known. Mancini wondered if the rejection of his altarpiece for St Peter’s might have been the tilting point of the painter’s whole life.Was Caravaggio a criminal?
Giulio Mancini, a contemporary of Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, reported that he had "some extravagances from time to time that can be explained by a hot tempered and passionate temperament". He also killed a man in 1606 and spent the last four years of his life on the run.Why did Caravaggio use tenebrism?
Caravaggio used perspective to bring the viewer into the action. He also used chiaroscuro to engage the emotions while intensifying the scene's impact through dramatic light and dark contrasts.Where are the most Caravaggio paintings?
Rome is the best starting point for seeing several Caravaggio paintings in one trip, with important works in museums and churches. This guide focuses on museum holdings worldwide and maps them where location data is available.Are Caravaggio paintings in churches or museums?
Both. Some major Caravaggio paintings remain in churches, especially in Rome, while many others are in museum collections. Use this page for museum holdings and verify church works separately before planning a route.
Sources
Where to See guide aggregates verified holdings of Caravaggio's works across the following collections.
- [1] museum Museum of Fine Arts of Rennes Used for: museum holdings.
- [2] museum Capitoline Museums Used for: museum holdings.
- [3] museum Galleria Palatina Used for: museum holdings.
- [4] museum Fondazione Roberto Longhi Used for: museum holdings.
- [5] museum Musée des Beaux-Arts de Rouen Used for: museum holdings.
- [6] museum Department of Prints and Drawings of the Louvre Used for: museum holdings.
- [7] wikidata Wikidata: Q42207 Used for: identifiers.
- [8] book Langdon, Helen, Caravaggio : a life Used for: biography.
- [9] book Desmond Seward, Caravaggio - A Life Used for: biography.
- [10] book Masterpieces of western art : a history of art in 900 individual studies from the Gothic to the present day Used for: biography.
Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-06-04. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.
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