If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website. To log in and use all the features of Khan Academy, please enable JavaScript in your browser.
Donate Login Sign up Search for courses, skills, and videos. Arts and humanities Europe - Baroque 17th century Italy. Restoring ancient sculpture in Baroque Rome. Bernini, Pluto and Proserpina. Bernini, David. Practice: Bernini, David. The new pope placed Bernini in charge of all artistic matters in Rome, culminating in his life-long work in transforming St.
Peters basilica into the church we so admire today. Borghese's early patronage of Bernini helped to establish him as the leading Italian sculptor and architect of the seventeenth century.
A grateful Bernini did finish the Apollo and Daphne, after he presented the Cardinal with the much admired David. The rest they say is history. This website uses cookies. You can read more about it here.
The main subject of the sculpture is the biblical David, about to throw the stone that will bring down Goliath, which will enable David to behead him. The image of David included power, nobility and showed heroism in all its glory. Therefore, in the compositions of the fifteenth century, he was shown as the winner. Bernini, in his work, showed a slightly different direction: dynamics, mental tension, and movement.
His statue captures the episode of the battle itself. Bernini put his creation in line with other famous works. He showed David, who was preparing to attack, gathering all his strength and will. The statue looks at the enemy with intense and hating eyes. In after just seven months, his intricately detailed carving of the Biblical David was completed. Bernini meticulously carved exquisite detail into every feature of his depiction of David. The face of David shows a crease of his frown, the facial contortions indicate deep concentration, his blue eyes ever on his opponent.
One can almost hear the grunts of his efforts as he slings the stone that brings the giant Goliath down and ends the war between the Philistines and the Israelites. The marble statue can be viewed from any angle and from all sides, yet no matter the angle viewed the observer can easily envision the battle this young man was about to engage in. Both works deserve their respective appreciation.
Both have earned it from different approaches!
0コメント