Tintoretto was a famous Italian painter and an important proponent of the Renaissance school. His body of work is mostly marked with startling and theatrical gestures, muscular characters with a clear and resolute viewpoint. The use of light and colour in his paintings exemplifies conventional ‘Venetian School’ of paintings, as he was considered one of the most remarkable Venetian painters of the sixteenth century after Titian. He worked under the guidance of Titian for a brief period. He looked up to the exceptional structural procedure of Michelangelo and was fascinated by the use of bold colour by Titian and tried to blend the two techniques in his productions. His studio was decorated with the inscription, “Michelangelo’s design and Titian’s Color”. Tintoretto was a very ambitious painter and his exceptional spirit and vigour in the art earned him the title, ‘Il Furioso’. His notable works include ‘The Last Supper’, ‘Paradise’, ‘Susanna and the Elders’, ‘Vulcan Surprising Venus and Mars’, ‘The Law and the Golden Calf’, ‘Saint Mark Rescuing the Slave’ and ‘Christ and the Adulteress’. He was also called Jacopo Robusti in his young age while his original name Jacopo Comin (where ‘Comin’ in local language refers to cumin) was later found out by ‘Museo del Prado’s’ curator Miguel Falomir. It was declared publicly during his retrospective at the Prado.