Interesting facts about italian sculptures

Page 1

www.vacation-now.com | info@sommerferie.nu

Interesting facts about Italian Sculptures


Renaissance was an efflorescence driven primarily by man's enhanced awareness. While at one level, it turned his inner focus to the beauty and harmony in the human form, at another, it analyzed man's perception of distance and space within the matrix of time, material and techniques. The resultant rebirth imparted a touch of genius in every art form- especially in sculpture. The Renaissance influence concretized in sculpture in myriad ways. Anatomy and drapery ceased to be symbolic-it had to be formed through observation and assimilation of classical forms. Geometric shapes permeated the balanced, closed compositions and you discover that triangles, circles and triangles form the basic grid. A harmony of space resembling the eye of vision is also apparent that led to portrayal of realistic space simulating three dimensions. The experimentation (as all art is in its initial stages) proved successful and sustainable due to its powerful patronage by the Papacy and the Church who had no better way of glorifying themselves. The increasingly opulent churches became dependent on the master sculptors to populate the spaces with masterpieces that even today make you wonder whether they will blink!


Michelangelo's David (Galleria dell 'Accademia, Florence) His David was much more than he one who fought and won over Goliath. It is imbued with the over powering strength, determination and power of the ordinary person who can conquer all. Michelangelo worshiped the male nude as the ultimate form and used torsion (twisting the body in one direction) or contraposto (twisting the body in contradictory directions) to bring out their musculature. You will be entranced by the perfect Renaissance nude a masterpiece of sculpture that became a symbolic of the power of ideas and the Renaissance.

Lorenzo Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise In 1401, young Ghiberti won the honor to craft the doors of Florence's Baptistery. Completed over a period of fifty-one years, it sent the Gothic format into an ethereal orbit of three dimensions .It was the defining moment of Renaissance reality that invented space and added a new dimension. The great master Michelangelo himself was wonderstruck and declared them to be "so beautiful they would grace the entrance to Paradise.


Pisano Pulpits (Duomo, Siena; Sant' Andrea, Pistoia; Baptistery and Duomo, Pisa) Father Nicola and son Giovanni, first invented and then refined the Gothic sculpture. While there once stood the largely symbolic and stilted figures, the duo transfused a new life, a new emotional language and volume to sculpture that transformed hard stone into fluid grace. The figures are so arresting that you almost the eyes to flutter!

Luca Signorelli's Last Judgment (Duomo, Orvieto) Having recently emerged from years of restoration, Signorelli's signature piece uses the separation of the blessed from the damned as an excuse to display his mastery of the human nude. It had all the elements that hallmarked the Renaissance sculptures. Every muscle was etched, each fiber taut. Michelangelo studied this seminal work before embarking on the subject in the Sistine Chapel.

For more Europe travel tips and information visit: Vacation Now For your Italy travel accommodation visit this link.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.