Renaissance Sculpture
The division of Renaissance art into three distinct periods began with Giorgio Vasari, the great Florentine art historian and chronicler of the lives of the artists. Vasari concluded, based on his universally accepted perception of Michelangelo as "Il Divino," that Renaissance art reached its most sublime expression in the works of Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci. However, some modern art historians wonder how valid or valuable this categorization and consequential value judgment is. Roberta J.M. Olson challenges the very existence of a "High Renaissance," on the grounds that "the term is artificial, a qualitative judgment of 'High' signifying the best," (149). Surely, there are noticeable differences in the vivid expressions of Italian Renaissance art from the fifteenth to the sixteenth centuries. Art from the early period of the Renaissance sprouted from the preceding medieval and Gothic artistic traditions, with their emphasis on dramatic facial expressions and compositions. This is especially evident in the sculptural arts, those three-dimensional figures that rendered the human form with increasing idealism. This trend toward idealistic renditions of the human face and figure directly derived from a revived interest in the Classical arts of ancient Greece and Rome. In fact, Renaissance art in general is defined by its classical motifs, materials, and mannerisms. "The tentative introduction of motifs derived from classical art into an otherwise Gothic scheme heralded the coming of the Renaissance," (Avery 32). Donatello signified this coming together of two artistic and philosophical traditions in the early periods of the Renaissance in Florence. A century later, Michelangelo Buonarotti built upon Donatello's earlier contributions to Italian art, and sculpture in particular. Although the works of Michelangelo defy categorization, his is generally considered to be "instrumental in creating the High Renaissance," and is heralded as that period's hallmark (Avery 168). Of all the works available for research by art historians, the two that most epitomize their periods and styles and which are most easily comparable because of their similar subject matter are Donatello's and Michelangelo's statues of David.
Donatello was first employed as an apprentice to Ghiberti, and by 1408 he was commissioned to do a sculpture of David to be used as an architectural feature for a Florentine cathedral. At the time, life-sized, free-standing sculptures were unusual commissions, as most were designed to be integral to buildings. However, in 1416, Donatello's David, which was cast in bronze, was sold to the city as an independent work of art. It was placed in the Palazzo della Signoria, and this movement was significant in defining the political, social, and economic climate that distinguished the Renaissance from the Gothic periods which predated it. Namely, art became increasingly secularized in the fifteenth century. This secularization was evident not only in the wealth of corporate commissions, but also in the treatment of religious subject matter as the Biblical tale of David and Goliath. In fact, both Donatello and Michelangelo's David sculptures seem so far removed from their religious origins that today many viewers forget the association. Donatello's David, in particular, marked the momentous break; it "converted (David) from an Old Testament figure into a partly secular civic hero," (Olson 48). The differences between earlier Gothic art and David's facial expressions, his posture, and especially his lack of clothing indicate that the sculpture "teeters between the Gothic and Renaissance worlds," (Olson 48).
Ironically, as art became more secular in its patronage, placement, and portrayal of figures, Donatello interpreted the slaying of Goliath with greater allegiance to the Bible. His David is notably young, an adolescent boy who rather than being a wealthy king is a peasant hero. Donatello's treatment of David suggests the boy's physical prowess secondary was to his divine inspiration. Olson notes that "Donatello's David is unconventional -- his slightness and youth deriving from textual sources rather than visual traditions where it was customary to depict him as a king, not a shepherd," (84).
Moreover, Donatello's David signifies the budding Renaissance style because it incorporates distinctive classical elements. These elements would later mature in the corresponding David by Michelangelo. Nevertheless, while Donatello preserved Biblical accuracy in his rendition of David slaying Goliath, he also paid tribute to the sculpture of ancient Greece and Rome. His David, in fact, is almost Mercurial with its pagan-influenced hat and its adorning wreath. Here, Christianity and paganism coexist in one statue. Michelangelo's later version had none of this; in fact, Michelangelo did away with the image of Goliath altogether to focus solely on...
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