Collection:
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ADJUNCT MODULE A: ITALIAN ART
LocalCollection
ADJUNCT MODULE A: ITALIAN ART
Collection
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Preferred Title:
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Bacchus
Work_PrefTitle
Bacchus
Preferred Title
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Image View:
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Overall three-quarter view from right
Image_Title
Overall three-quarter view from right
Image View
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Creator:
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Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian sculptor, 1475-1564)
Agent_Display
Michelangelo Buonarroti (Italian sculptor, 1475-1564)
Creator
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Location:
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repository: Museo Nazionale del Bargello (Florence, Tuscany, Italy)
Work_Location_Type_D isplay
repository: Museo Nazionale del Bargello (Florence, Tuscany, Italy)
Location
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Location Note:
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Via del Proconsolo, 4
Work_LocationNotes
Via del Proconsolo, 4
Location Note
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GPS:
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43.770423 11.257947
GPS
43.770423 11.257947
GPS
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Date:
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1496-1497 (creation)
Work_DateDisplay
1496-1497 (creation)
Date
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Cultural Context:
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Italian
Work_Culture
Italian
Cultural Context
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Style Period:
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Renaissance
Work_StylePeriodDisp lay
Renaissance
Style Period
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Work Type 1:
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sculpture (visual work)
Work_Worktype1
sculpture (visual work)
Work Type 1
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Classification:
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sculpture
Work_Classification
sculpture
Classification
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Material:
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marble
Work_MaterialDisplay
marble
Material
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Technique:
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carving (processes)
Work_Technique
carving (processes)
Technique
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Measurements:
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203 cm (height)
Work_MeasurementDisp lay
203 cm (height)
Measurements
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Description:
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Cardinal Raffaele Riario summoned Michelangelo to Rome in the summer of 1496 and ordered the figure of Bacchus. The statue was initially designed to compliment Riario’s collection of antiquities, but for unknown reasons it entered the collection of Jacopo Galli in 1497 and was exhibited in his garden. The Bacchus was undoubtedly conceived as an exercise in the Antique. As a garden statue, it is superficially untypical of Michelangelo, being a free-standing group, designed to be viewed in the round; most of Michelangelo’s surviving works were conceived for architectural settings with restricted viewpoints. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordart online.com/)
Work_Description_Sou rce
Cardinal Raffaele Riario summoned Michelangelo to Rome in the summer of 1496 and ordered the figure of Bacchus. The statue was initially designed to compliment Riario’s collection of antiquities, but for unknown reasons it entered the collection of Jacopo Galli in 1497 and was exhibited in his garden. The Bacchus was undoubtedly conceived as an exercise in the Antique. As a garden statue, it is superficially untypical of Michelangelo, being a free-standing group, designed to be viewed in the round; most of Michelangelo’s surviving works were conceived for architectural settings with restricted viewpoints. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordart online.com/)
Description
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Collection:
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Adjunct Module A: Italian Art
LocalCollection
Adjunct Module A: Italian Art
Collection
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Identifier:
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7A1-MB-NMB-B-A03
Image_OriginalVendor ID
7A1-MB-NMB-B-A03
Identifier
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Rights:
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© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Image_Rights
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Rights
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