Domenico Morone (c. 1442 – 1518) was an Italian painter from Verona, painting in an early Renaissance style.
His pupils included Michele da Verona and Girolamo dai Libri.
Domenico Morone is known from a few panels, mainly depicting public festivals or tournaments with crowds of small figures.
Two small cassone panels depicting the Rape of Sabine women dated to c.1490 and attributed to Morone were bought by the National Gallery, London in 1886 and remain in its collections.
[3] He was particularly prolific at the church of San Bernardino, Verona, painting a Madonna for the shutters of its organ (acquired with the Edward Solly collection by Berlin State Museums[4]) and producing the frescoes for its chapel of Sant' Antonio, as well as leading the project to fresco its Franciscan library, with several of the central library frescoes painted by Morone himself.