1482 – Ludovico Sforza, Duke of Milan, commissions Leonardo da Vinci to make an equestrian statue that would have been the largest in the world. A clay cast is made over sixteen years but the bronze is appropriated for use in cannons and the cast is destroyed when the Duke’s castle falls to French invaders.
Bernt Notke creates his painted wooden sculpture of Saint George and the Dragon (Sankt Göran och Draken) for the Storkyrkan (Saint Nicholas' church) in Stockholm.
1488 - Giovanni di Stefano (sculptor) makes floor intarsia showing Hermes Trismegistus, Plato and Marsilio Ficino in the west entrance of Siena Cathedral.
1485: Titian – leader of the 16th-century Venetian school of the Italian Renaissance (died 1576)
1485: Urs Graf – Swiss Renaissance painter and printmaker of woodcuts, etchings and engravings (d. c.1529)
1485: Sebastiano del Piombo (byname of Sebastiano Luciani) – Italian Renaissance-Mannerist painter, famous for his combination of the colors of the Venetian school and the monumental forms of the Roman school (died 1547)
1485: Jost de Negker, Dutch woodcut-maker, printer and publisher (died 1544)
1485: Francesco Vecellio – Venetian painter of the early Renaissance, best known as the elder brother of the painter Titian (died 1560)
1485: Jean Duvet – French Renaissance goldsmith and engraver (died 1562)
1485: Wolf Huber – Austrian painter, printmaker, and architect, a leading member of the Danube School (died 1553)
1485: Girolamo Romanino, Italian painter (died 1566)
1482: Agnolo degli Erri - Italian Gothic painter of the Italian Renaissance (born 1440)
1482: Bartolomeo degli Erri - Italian Gothic painter of the Italian Renaissance (born 1447)
1481: Jean Fouquet – French painter, a master of both panel painting and manuscript illumination, and the apparent inventor of the portrait miniature (died 1420)
1481: Agostino di Duccio – Italian early Renaissance sculptor (born 1418)
1481: Sano di Pietro – early Italian Renaissance painter from Siena (born 1406)