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Title: Leonardo Da Vinci and the Art of Sculpture
Description: Atlanta, Georgia, High Museum of Art, 2009. Hardcover. Color pictorial wraps; 216 pp.; 49 color plates; 118 color and bw figures. Accompanied the exhibition of the same name, which appeared at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia, and the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, California. Contents as follows: irectors' foreword and acknowledgments /; Michael E. Shapiro and Michael Brand --; Introduction. Leonardo : the mind of the sculptor /; Gary M. Radke --; Leonardo, student of sculpture /; Gary M. Radke --; What is good about sculpture? : Leonardo's Paragone revisited /; Martin Kemp --; Leonardo, The Vitruvian man, and the De statua treatise /; Pietro C. Marani --; Leonardo and the equestrian monument for Francesco Sforza : the story of an unrealized monumental sculpture /; Andrea Bernardoni --; An abiding obsession : Leonardo's equestrian projects, 1507-1519 /; Gary M. Radke and Darin J. Stine --; Giovan Francesco Rustici, with and without Leonardo /; Philippe Sénéchal --; Florence and the bronze age : Leonardo and casting, the war of Pisa, and the Dieci di Balìa /; Tommaso Mozzati. "Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) is renowned as a painter, designer, draftsman, architect, engineer, scientist, and theorist. His work as a sculptor is not commonly acknowledged, and many have argued that Leonardo believed that sculpture was an inferior art form ("of lesser genius than painting"). Challenging and overturning these assumptions, Leonardo da Vinci and the Art of Sculpture looks at the sculptural projects that the artist undertook, as well as the late Renaissance sculptures that were indebted to him. Leonardo consistently drew inspiration from ancient sculpture, admired the work of such contemporary sculptural innovators as Donatello, and even trained under Andrea del Verrocchio, the preeminent bronze sculptor of late 15th-century Florence. Furthermore, Leonardo spent many years of his life working on two larger-than-life-sized horse sculptures - Sforza and Trivulzio - monuments to Francesco Sforza, the Duke of Milan, and to Gian Giacomo Trivulzio, his successor. Although neither was completed, the authors argue that these equestrian monuments show how Leonardo was intensely engaged with the design dilemmas of representing a horse rearing on its hind legs. Another highlight of the book is a group of new images of the John the Baptist Preaching to a Levite and a Pharisee, a recently restored large-scale work in the Florentine Baptistery that clearly demonstrates Leonardo's collaboration with Giovanni Francesco Rustici."--Jacket. VG .

Keywords: European Artists ; Da Vinci, Leonardo ; ;

Price: US$ 29.97 Seller: Kevin Mullen, Bookseller
- Book number: 169715

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