Many of "the classics" are there, to wit:
- Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise
- Michelangelo's David & Medici Mausoleum sculptures (Lorenzo di Piero, Duke of Urbino & Giuliano di Lorenzo, Duke of Nemours, by 1534)
- Donatello's David / Cavalcanti Annunciation / Duomo Cantoria (arranged for comparison adjacent to that of Luca della Robbia)
- Mino di Fiesole's Bust of Piero the Gouty
Carlo Marsuppini's Santa Croce tomb by Desiderio da Settignano (1453-60) really caught my eye.
It is a visually jaw-dropping source of humanist iconographic and decorative imagery, and the cast is beautifully done. It is placed adjacent to the Santa Maria del Popolo tomb of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza by Andrea Sansovino (1505-9) which to my mind is a prime example of the influence of Nero's recently rediscovered Golden House in its grotesque work. Third in line, and not to be overlooked is the (far smaller) tomb of Tuscan lawyer/lecturer Filippo Decio (d.1534) from Campo Santo by the Pisan Stagio Stagi, demonstrating how this style filtered down and developed over the next generation.
A project comparing and contrasting these would be great fun; alternatively, the Sforza (and Decio) tombs could be used as a control for the Layer Marney sarcophagi and canopies mentioned a while back. I can see these replicas whenever I want FOC and in a quiet, brightly-lit environment with the National Art Library on-site. Would still more than justify a trip to Florence and/or Rome though!
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