332

Antonio del Pollaiuolo - Portrait of a Young Lady

Currency:USD Category:Art / Medium - Lithographs Start Price:1.00 USD Estimated At:250.00 - 300.00 USD
Antonio del Pollaiuolo - Portrait of a Young Lady
SOLD
110.00USDto floor+ buyer's premium
This item SOLD at 2023 Jun 14 @ 09:40UTC-7 : PDT/MST
High End Watches, Exotic Antiques, Cars, Gold, Vintage & Collectible Coins, and Jewelry.
Artist: Antonio del Pollaiuolo - Title: Portrait of a Young Lady - Medium: Fine Art Reproduction Giclee on Canvas - Image Size: Approximately 20 inches x 13.25 inches - Unframed on Unstretched Canvas - Biography: Antonio del Pollaiuolo achieved his greatest successes as a sculptor and metal-worker. The exact ascription of his works is doubtful, as his brother Piero did much in collaboration with him. The fifteenth-century addition of the infant twins Romulus and Remus to an existing bronze sculpture of the Ancient Roman mythological she-wolf who nursed them has been attributed by some to him. - He only produced one surviving engraving, the Battle of the Nude Men, but both in its size and sophistication this took the Italian print to new levels, and remains one of the most famous prints of the Renaissance. - In 1484 Antonio took up his residence in Rome, where he executed the tomb of Pope Sixtus IV, now in the Museum of St. Peter's (finished in 1493), a composition in which he again manifested the quality of exaggeration in the anatomical features of the figures. In 1496 he went to Florence in order to put the finishing touches to the work already begun in the sacristy of Santo Spirito. He died in Rome as a rich man, having just finished his mausoleum of Pope Innocent VIII, also in St. Peter's, and was buried in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli, where a monument was raised to him near that of his brother. - His main contribution to Florentine painting lay in his analysis of the human body in movement or under conditions of strain, but he is also important for his pioneering interest in landscape. His students included Sandro Botticelli.