David
Michelangelo
1501–1504
Perhaps
one the most famous statues in the world, Michelangelo’s David is a universal icon of the Renaissance and the genius of the
artist himself. Commissioned for the Piazza della Signoria, the David was rendered like no other
interpretation before. The pose in particular sets it
apart from previous David’s by Donatello and Verrocchio who had both
represented the hero standing victorious over the head of Goliath, and Andrea del Castagno who had shown the boy in mid-swing, even as Goliath's head rested between his
feet. Carved out of a single piece of
Carrara marble, the David is a statue created using the subtractive method.
This freestanding sculpture is truly a marvelous work of the time balance-wise
as Michelangelo so cleverly shifted the weight of the figure onto a stump
attached to the back of the bottom right leg.
Judith and
Holofernes
Donatello
1460
Copy
in the Piazza della Signoria, Original in Palazzo Vecchio
As with virtually all of his other works, Donatello focused on
naturalism in Judith and Holofernes. The base of the sculpture, for example, is
cushion-like and reminiscent of a similar device used in Donatello's St. Mark.
Judith's clothes are realistically mussed; her clothes fall naturally in folds
along her raised arm. The bronze for the statue was cast in eleven parts to
make the gilding easier. The sculpture was crafted in the round and has four
distinct faces, providing the viewer with 360 degrees of intensely inspiring
sculpture.
Pope Liberius Baptizing the Neophytes
Alessandro Algardi, European
Southern European
Italian, 1602 – 1654
This terracotta
relief is the only known preliminary study for a sculpture adorning the
fountain of Saint Damasus in the Belvedere courtyard of the Vatican. The relief
shows Pope Liberius baptizing with water from this newly created source. In contrast to the reductive process of
carving, modeling is essentially a building-up process in which the sculpture
grows organically from the inside. The artist, Algardi, made
this study in clay, an easily worked medium that allowed him to experiment and
refine his ideas before carving the fountain relief in marble. By sculpting the
foreground figures almost fully in the round and those farther away in
increasingly shallow relief, Algardi achieved the illusion of spatial depth and
three-dimensional volume on a two-dimensional surface.
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