Importance Of Sculptures In Renaissance Art

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Taking it from the 15th century (Renaissance) Andrea del Verrocchio created several famous bronze sculptures such as David (1475) and Equestrian Statue of Bartolomeo Colleoni (1480-95). David sculpture was an inspiration by Donatello but this was less provocative and more angular. Generally a feature of Renaissance art, which is really important, it is its naturalism. Especially in sculpture there was an increase in contemporary themes, which came together with the naturalistic handling of proportions, perspective and anatomy. Sculpture in the time of Renaissance art was religious and secular. This is supported by the fact that many cathedral baptisteries and sacristy doors were entirely made of bronze sculpture. Also, there was a large number …show more content…

However, this was not always the case, as there were also non-church sculptures, in which classical mythology was featured. At that time, gold and silver were rarely used because of the higher importance of bronze as it is ductile and highly durable. Also it looks brilliant when it is gilded. However, those characteristics took place mostly in High Renaissance as the sculptors overcame the fact that bronze-casting was crude. Furthermore, in Renaissance the sculptural techniques that were used by the sculptors were highly similar with those used by Roman and Greek sculptors. But in Renaissance, the ethos was much more pictorial, which means that written designs were …show more content…

He created some really characteristic figures that are highly thin and also stretched vertically. They seem that they have neither mass nor volume but their feet are skeletal and oversized. Almost all of this series of sculptures have different shades of gray applied to them which make them look more eroded and rough. An example of a sculpture like that is Three Men Walking (1949) which is made of bronze again, and it basically shows three extremely thin men being in a movement, like walking. They are so thin that they may remind the viewers of lonely trees losing their foliage. Generally Giacometti’s work is really well balanced between specific and universal and between modern and historical. The eroded effect that he used to create on the sculptures and the colour he gave them remind the viewers of something more historical, even from another century. But on the other hand the elongated and skeletal men may be concerned as characteristics of a more modern art period. This is mainly the characteristic that inspired me the most and made me create my own work inspired by Giacometti’s

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