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Media Center for Art History, Archaeology & Historic Preservation
Renaissance Sculpture
Site Structure
   
Homepage
     
  Preface
Includes the course syllabus and requirements
     
  Library
A compendium of texts and links relating to the study of renaissance sculpture
     
 

Visual Resources
Image portfolios organized in chronological, thematic, and/or media specific groupings

Visual Resources

The Fourteenth Century
  Nicola Pisano
     
  Giovanni Pisano
     
  The Facade of Orvieto Cathedral
     
The Fifteenth Century
  Jacopo della Quercia
     
  Lorenzo Ghiberti, Florence Baptistry, North Doors, The Life of Christ, 1403-1424
     
  Lorenzo Ghiberti, Florence Baptistry, Gates of Paradise, Episodes from the Old Testament, 1425-1452
     
  Lorenzo Ghiberti, Other Works including the sculptures on Or San Michele
     
  Donatello
     
  Florence, San Lorenzo, The Old Sacristy, Architecture by Filippo Brunelleschi, Sculptural Decoration by Donatello
     
  Nanni di Banco
     
  Luca della Robbia
     
  The Tomb of the Cardinal of Portugal (Jacopo di Lusitania, d. 1459), San Miniato al Monte, Florence (Antonio Rossellino, Bernardo Rossellino, Luca della Robbia, Piero and Antonio Pollaiuolo, Alesso Baldovinetti)
     
  Desiderio da Settignano
     
  Antonio and Piero Pollaiuolo
     
  Andrea del Verrocchio
     
The Sixteenth Century
  Michelangelo, Early Works (I)
     
  Michelangelo, Early Works (II)
     
  Michelangelo, The Theme of the Madonna and Child
  Focus on The Bruges Madonna
     
  Michelangelo, The Tomb of Pope Julius II (Overview)
     
    The Commission for the Tomb of Pope Julius II and the St. Matthew for Florence Cathedral
     
    The Tomb of Pope Julius II, Designs of 1513 and 1516
     
    The Tomb of Pope Julius II, Further Work on the Tomb Project, and other Works of the Period
     
    The Tomb of Pope Julius II, Completion of the Project
     
  Michelangelo, The Medici Tombs in the New Sacristy, San Lorenzo
     
Venice
  Scuola Grande di San Marco
     

  Maps and Diagrams


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Columbia University Department of Art History and Archaeology