Pordenone (born c. 1483, Pordenone, Republic of Venice—died 1539, Ferrara, Duchy of Ferrara) was a High Renaissance Italian painter chiefly known for his frescoes of religious subjects.
Pordenone was a pupil of Pellegrino da S. Daniele and other Friulian masters, but his early style is founded on Venetian models and in particular on Andrea Mantegna. Later he was influenced by Titian, Correggio, and also by the Roman works of Michelangelo and Raphael. It is assumed, therefore, that he went to Rome, probably about 1515/16.
Pordenone worked throughout northern Italy. In Venice his work was so popular that for a time he seriously rivaled Titian himself. His frescoes in Venice have perished, but his Passion frescoes (after 1521; Cremona Cathedral) and his frescoes in Treviso Cathedral (1520–22) are rendered in broad strokes of vibrant colour and reveal a grave, but sometimes violent, temperament. His frescoes at Piacenza (1531; Madonna di Campagna) are painted in the illusionistic manner of Correggio and exhibit a more brilliant palette and precise technique. Pordenone had no significant followers, but Titian and Peter Paul Rubens borrowed ideas from his work.