Ads
related to: rondanini pieta museum tickets booking
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
[1] [2] The name Rondanini refers to the fact that the sculpture stood for centuries in the courtyard at the Palazzo Rondanini (also known as Palazzo Rondinini) in Rome. [3] Certain sources point out that biographer Giorgio Vasari had referred to this Pietà in 1550, suggesting that the first version may already have been underway at that time. [4]
The Museum of Musical Instruments. The Egyptian Museum. The Prehistoric collections of the Archaeological Museum of Milan. Applied Arts Collection. The Antique Furniture & Wooden Sculpture Museum. The Achille Bertarelli Print Collection. The Museum of the Rondanini Pietà which includes Michelangelo's last sculpture (the Rondanini Pietà) [8]
The Deposition (also called the Bandini Pietà or The Lamentation over the Dead Christ) is a marble sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance master Michelangelo.The sculpture, on which Michelangelo worked between 1547 and 1555, depicts four figures: the dead body of Jesus Christ, newly taken down from the Cross, Nicodemus [1] (or possibly Joseph of Arimathea), Mary Magdalene and the Virgin Mary.
Rondanini Pietà; Rood of Grace; Sacred Heart of Jesus (Indianapolis) Sagrat Cor de Jesus; Santo Bambino of Aracoeli; Holy Infant of Atocha; Santo Niño de Cebú; Santo Niño de Tondo; Santo Niño de Arévalo; Señor de las Tribulaciones; Señor de los Temblores; Señor de Los Cielos (Tlaltenago, Zacatecas, Mexico) The Servant Christ; Veiled Christ
The various frescoed rooms of the museum house an armoury, a tapestry room, some funerary monuments, Michelangelo's Rondanini Pietà and two medieval portals. The Sala Verde ('green room') displays 15th- and 16th-century sculptures, the collection of arms of the Castello Sforzesco and the Portale del Banco Mediceo , a gate removed from Via Bossi.
Bacchus (1496–1497) [1] is a marble sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance sculptor, painter, architect and poet Michelangelo.The statue is somewhat over life-size and represents Bacchus, the Roman god of wine, in a reeling pose suggestive of drunkenness.
Head of a Faun is a lost sculpture by Italian Renaissance master Michelangelo, dating from c. 1489.His first known work of sculpture in marble, it was sculpted when he was 15 or 16 as a copy of an antique work with some minor alterations.
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, by Antonio Canova, 1798-1801 (Vatican Museums, Rome). The Medusa Rondanini was formerly exhibited in Palazzo Rondanini [2] in the upper end of via del Corso, Rome, where it was overlooked by the great art historian Johann Joachim Winckelmann, perhaps distracted by Michelangelo's Rondanini Pietà in the same collection.