Donatello Essay

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Universally known as Donatello, or for our contemporary movie going crowd he is also known as a Ninja Turtle who has intelligence, cool calculation, and a gift for inventing. Donatello was one the Renaissance masters that would become one of the most influential artists of 15th century Italy. Predating Michelangelo, Donatello was one of Florentine 's greatest sculptors with a very multifaceted outlook of his craft, and drive to invent and reinvent that would shoot him to the top of the charts to earn his place in history along with the likes of Raphael, Leonardo Da Vinci and even Michelangelo years after him. During his life, Donatello became one of the most clamored-for artist for his life-like and intensely emotional and powerful sculptures. …show more content…

The sculptor had a reputation for creating imposing, larger-than-life figures (Biography). His style incorporated the science of perspective, which allowed him to create new figures that occupied measurable space (Biography). Donatello also drew heavily from reality for inspiration to accurately show the emotion and intense features in his figures’ faces and body positions (Biography). Unlike many of his peers, Donatello’s youth was spent taking on the basics he had learned from the Stonemasons’ Guild and expanded them in ways that pleased him (Artble). At the beginning of his career, Donatello was inspired mostly by sculptures he had seen (Artble). His early works were characterized by Gothic elements such as long, graceful forms and ornamental detail, however some works after his “David”, he moved away from that style in favor for a more classical technique (Artble). As his career continued, his style evolved and became more dramatic and more emotional (Artble). When Donatello returned to Florence he spent his time with reliefs, which in sculpture is any work in which figures are projected from a supporting background, usually on a plane surface (Encyclopedia Britannica). These reliefs were for various churches throughout the city, when he had become bedridden; his students completed his unfinished works, and were extremely careful to …show more content…

More famously is his statue of David before Michelangelo. Donatello lived in the era of the Renaissance, or also known as the era of the individual (Sayre 463). A poet and scholar at the time named Petrarch conceived this new concept called “Humanism”, as defined in Henry Sayre’s book “A world of art” as “the philosophy that emphasized the unique the value of each person” (Sayre, 463). Donatello captured this believe in his statue of David, something that would be made famous by the artist-scultpor Michelangelo, only instead of the portrayal of the ideal physique of a man, Donatello opts for a youthful man. “He is posed in a perfectly classical contrapposto-“ (Sayre 463), a sculptural scheme in which a standing human figure is poised such that the weight rests on one leg, freeing the other leg which is bent at the knee (Sayre, 547), “But the young hero-almost anti-heroic in the youthful fragility of his physique-is almost full self-conscious, his attention turned, in what appears to be full-blown self adoration, upon himself as an object of physical beauty” (Sayre 463). In Padua, one of Donatello’s most controversial pieces was the Gattamelata, a statue, commissioned by the city that was meant to honor Erasmo da Narni, a Venetian nobleman and mercenary. The controversy in the piece came in that it was the departure from traditional

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