Exterior . The main portal was completed in 1412, with statues by Bonazza added in 1736–1737. The piazza in front of the church has a statue of
Petrarch. On the left flank of the church is a commemorative plaque dedicated to parishioners who died during the second world war.
Interior The counterfacade has a canvas depicting the
Annunciation by
Dario Varotari the Younger. The water fonts at the entrance were sculpted by
Giovanni Bonazza. The main altar has a detached fresco depicting the
Virgin and child by
Stefano Dall'Arzere. In 1576, while the
bubonic plague afflicted the town, this venerated image was carried in procession through the city from its original location near the
Palazzo del Capitanio to this church. The ebbing of the plague was attributed to the miraculous icon. Every February 2, during the
Festa dei Lumini recalls this event. An 18th-century bas-relief depicts the
Last Supper while the organ on the left depicts
Stories of the Image of the Madonna of the Carmine by
Battista Bissoni. The apse was richly decorated by
Antonio Noale. The walls have large 17th-century canvases, depicting
Saints of the Carmelite order and
Stories of the Old Testament. A recent restoration of the central nave, revealed Renaissance frescoes depicting prophets and sybils. One of the chapels to the right of the entrance has the processional statue of the
Madonna del Carmine, which is carried through the streets of the quarter, every July 16. Other works in the interior include: •
Statue, third altar on right by
Giovanni Bonazza; • Mother of Zebede before Christ, 6th altar on right by
Padovanino; •
Funeral monument of Tiberio Deciani, a Paduan lawyer, on the right pilaster of below the dome, sculpted by
Francesco Segala, addossato al pilastro destro di sostegno della cupola. The pavement is made from polychrome marble. The
Polyptych of Lazarus by
Francesco Squarcione, now in the
Museo Civici of Padua, was originally in this church. ==Scuola del Carmine==