His major painting of the 1490s is the
Resurrection (painted with fellow da Vinci pupil
Marco d'Oggiono and now in the Gemäldegalerie, Berlin). A
Madonna and Child in the
Museo Poldi Pezzoli of Milan, is one of the high points of the Lombard
Quattrocento. His portraits, often in profile, and his half-length renderings of the
Madonna and Child are Leonardesque in conception, though the clean hard edges of his outlines lack Leonardo's
sfumato. In
Bologna, where he remained in 1500–1502, he found sympathetic patrons in the Casio family, of whom he painted several portraits and for whom he produced his masterwork, the
Pala Casio for the Church of the Misericordia (Louvre Museum); it depicts a
Madonna and Child with John the Baptist and Saint Sebastian and two Kneeling Donors, Giacomo Marchione de' Pandolfi da Casio and his son, the Bolognese poet Girolamo Casio, who mentioned Boltraffio in some of his
sonnets. Boltraffio's portrait of Girolamo Casio is at the
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan. His
Portrait of a Man in Profile is in the
National Gallery, London. The standard monograph is Maria Teresa Fiorio,
Giovanni Antonio Boltraffio: Un pittore milanese nel lume di Leonardo. (Milan and Rome) 2000. ==Selected works with disputed attribution==