
Capital
Sculptures - Plaster casts
Alkotó | |
---|---|
Készítés ideje | 1433–1439 (original), 1907 (cast) |
Tárgytípus | plaster cast |
Anyag, technika | plaster cast |
Méret | 98 × 700 cm |
Leltári szám | Rg.165 |
Gyűjtemény | Sculptures - Plaster casts |
Kiállítva | Star Fortress (Komárom), Cantorie (Singing Galleries) by Donatello and Luca della Robbia, Gallery XIII |
The Singing Gallery (Italian: Cantoria) is one of Donatello’s best-known works. He carved the marble balcony for the Duomo in Florence between 1433 and 1439. Despite its name, the gallery was initially intended to house the cathedral’s old organ rather than as a place for singers. The new organ was placed in the gallery on the opposite wall, created by Luca della Robbia, another eminent Flortentine sculptor. Whereas a connection is often drawn between
music-making and singing children and the verses of Psalm 150, there is no known reference point for Donatello’s dancing and singing angels. The plaster cast fails to reproduce the appearance of the original work, given that Donatello decorated the background with glass mosaics in order to give emphasis to the figures of angels. The Museum of Fine Arts ordered plaster casts of six reliefs from the balcony, thereby omitting the architectural frame.
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