Which of the following artists used his creations to try to teach lessons of morality to viewers?

A. Mazzoal
B. Tintoretto
C. Raphael
D. Bosch

What does your book say?

i think it is Bosch because it says " Bosch's pictures were meant to be viewed in two ways--as stories and as symbolic messages. His stories clearly focused on the subject of good and evil"

For Tintoretto it just says he was able to combine the goals of mannerism with a venetial love of color.

Then your answer must be Bosch. :-)

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12640c.htm Well, the Roman Catholics like him and his moral character.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raphael#Drawings

Notice the other master of the time was Michangelo, who painted male , which was not in taste in that time. In the Sistine Chapel, the Church heiarchy made him put fig leafs in those places. Raphael painted images of the female body, which was in "taste" during those times.
Such is life.

And a comment on Bosch. He had a great imagination (living in Holland during the Witch Persecutions) of visualizing evil spirits, and he depected them as grotesque things with human parts and other parts. He ran this theme over and over. But frankly, he viewed the consequences of sin in his paintings as hell on Earth, rather than after-life. I am not certain preaching or drawing this is making any views toward teaching morality but rather presenting good and evil as Earth images. I don't see the beauty in it, and at the time, beauty was considered high morality. Others might disagree with me on this, but I don't equate good and evil images as teaching morality. http://www.gather.com/viewArticle.jsp?articleId=281474977455139

The artist who used his creations to try to teach lessons of morality to viewers from the given options is D. Bosch.

To arrive at this answer, you can start by familiarizing yourself with the works of the artists listed.

A. Mazzoal: This artist does not have any particular association with using his creations to teach lessons of morality.

B. Tintoretto: Although Tintoretto was a renowned artist of the Italian Renaissance, his works were largely focused on religious and historical subjects. However, teaching lessons of morality was not a primary focus of his art.

C. Raphael: While Raphael is recognized for his contributions to art during the High Renaissance, his works primarily focused on aesthetic beauty, religious themes, and classical subject matter rather than moral lessons.

D. Bosch: Hieronymus Bosch, commonly known as Bosch, was a Northern Renaissance painter famous for his fantastical and highly symbolic artworks. His paintings often depicted moral and religious allegories, where he aimed to convey messages about sin, temptation, human virtue, and divine justice.

By considering the information above, we can conclude that D. Bosch used his creations to try to teach lessons of morality to viewers.