CAVAZZOLA or CAVAZZUOLA, PAOLO MORAN DO (1486-1522), Italian painter of the Veronese school, a pupil of Domenico Morone. He worked at Verona, where he decorated many churches with frescoes (San Nazzaro e Celso, S. Anastasia, S. Chiara, S. Eufemia, S.M. in Organo). His earliest dated work extant was painted in 1508 (Villa Gazzada near Varese). The master is seen at his best in the series of pictures, five in number, which treat of the "Passion," formerly in the church of S. Bernardino and now in the Verona gallery. The series was completed in 1517. Nowhere outside Verona is he so well represented as in the National Gallery, London (which contains two signed pictures, the "St. Roch with the Angel" (1918) and the "Madonna, St. John the Baptist and an Angel." There are also some fine portraits extant (Dresden gallery; Uffizi; Bergamo). The great altarpiece of the Madonna with six saints and with the portrait of the donor, Caterina de Sacchi, is his last work. He died on Aug. 13, 1522, and was buried in St. Polo at Verona. Vasari gives as reason for his premature death that he had set his heart on becoming great, and, working hard, undermined his health. Cavazzola's contemporaries hailed him as the Raphael of the school of Verona.