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  2. Putto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Putto

    Renaissance putti, detail from the Camera degli Sposi, by Andrea Mantegna, 1465–1474, fresco, Ducal Palace, Mantua, Italy. A putto (Italian:; plural putti) [1] is a figure in a work of art depicted as a chubby male child, usually naked and very often winged.

  3. Manneken Pis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manneken_Pis

    The statue's original name was Menneke Pis or Menneke Pist. [2] [5] In fact, in the Brabantian dialect of Brussels (known as Brusselian, and also sometimes referred to as Marols or Marollien), [19] een manneke means a small man, whereas een menneke means a little boy (it is the diminutive of men, meaning boy), though in modern Flemish (the local variant of Dutch), menneke also means a small ...

  4. Madonna and Child with Four Cherubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madonna_and_Child_with...

    Madonna and Child with Four Cherubs is a c.1440 terracotta sculpture by Donatello, now in the Bode-Museum in Berlin, which bought it in 1888. [1] Still partly medieval in its iconography, Mary and Jesus' heads touch in a manner also seen in the artist's Pazzi Madonna .

  5. List of statues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_statues

    Statue Park, Szoborpark or Statue Park is a park in Budapest's XXII. district, with a gathering of monumental Soviet-era statues. Liberty Statue, The Szabadság Szobor or Liberty Statue (sometimes Freedom Statue) in Budapest, Hungary, was first erected in 1947 in remembrance of the Soviet liberation of Hungary from Nazi forces during World War II.

  6. CHERUB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CHERUB

    CHERUB (/ ˈ tʃ ɛ r ə b /) is a series of teenage spy novels written by English author Robert Muchamore, focusing around a fictional division of the British Security Service called CHERUB, which employs children, predominantly orphans, 17 or younger as intelligence agents.

  7. Lamassu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamassu

    Lamassu at the Iraq Museum, Baghdad.. The goddess Lama appears initially as a mediating goddess who precedes the orans and presents them to the deities. [3] The protective deity is clearly labelled as Lam(m)a in a Kassite stele unearthed at Uruk, in the temple of Ishtar, goddess to which she had been dedicated by king Nazi-Maruttash (1307–1282 BC). [9]