CAMPAGNOLA, DOMENICO, Italian painter and en graver, who worked during the first half of the 16th century at Padua. In conjunction with Titian he decorated the Scuola del Santo with a series of frescoes representing the life of St. An thony. He was also employed on frescoes in the Scuola del Car mine and in palaces of Padua. His name occurs for the last time on Nov. 24, 1562, when he undertook the decoration of a wall in the sacristy of the cathedral. Among his first extant works are some engravings and woodcuts signed and dated 1517 and 1518. He is well known for his pen and ink drawings, many of which were at one time ascribed to Titian. These drawings are not merely sketches or preliminary studies for pictures, but are works complete in themselves. One of the finest examples is a landscape with two youths in the foreground, signed by the artist, in the Malcolm collection at the British Museum (388).