Tullio lombardo biography examples

          Tullio is unquestionably a great sculptor, yet Anne Markham Schulz's book is the first full-dress monograph ever published on him..

          The 15th century marble statue of Adam, by Venetian sculptor Tullio Lombardo has been restored by the Metropolitan Museum.

          Tullio Lombardo

          Italian sculptor

          Tullio Lombardo (c. 1455 – November 17, 1532), also known as Tullio Solari, was an Italian Renaissancesculptor. He was the brother of Antonio Lombardo and son of Pietro Lombardo.[1] The Lombardo family worked together to sculpt famous Catholicchurches and tombs.

          The church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo contains the Monument to Doge Pietro Mocenigo, executed with his father and brother, and the Monument to Doge Andrea Vendramin,[2] an evocation of a Roman triumphal arch encrusted with decorative figures.

          Tullio Lombardo came from a renowned northern Italian family of sculptors and architects.

        1. Tullio Lombardo came from a renowned northern Italian family of sculptors and architects.
        2. Despite the civic preeminence that came at the end of his life, Andrea Vendramin was a long-lived non- entity Born in , he was eighty-three by the time.
        3. Tullio is unquestionably a great sculptor, yet Anne Markham Schulz's book is the first full-dress monograph ever published on him.
        4. Tullio was producing a cultural hybrid, in acts of artistic imitation designed precisely to register the difference between ancient and modern;.
        5. When it debuted in the last decade of the fifteenth century, Tullio's Adam boasted one of the most audaciously unsupported limbs yet to appear on a life-sized.
        6. Tullio also likely completed the funereal monument to Marco Cornaro in the Church of Santi Apostoli in Venice and the frieze in the Cornaro Chapel of the Santa Maria Gloriosa dei Frari. He also participated in the work to decorate Santa Maria dei Miracoli, Venice.

          The funeral monument to Doge Giovanni Mocenigo (r. 1478-1485), in San Giovanni e Paolo, is also attributed to Tullio Lombardo. [3]

          References

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