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Tuscan sculptor who
began by modelling in terracotta and then specialized in marble carving.
His real name was Andrea Contucci.
He was in Portugal
1491-1500 as an artistic emissary of Lorenzo de' Medici. Returning to
Florence he carved two statues for Genoa cathedral and another two forming
the "Baptism of Christ" for the Florentine Baptistry (1502-05); these
four statues constitute the epitome of High Renaissance sculpture, equivalent
to the paintings of, for instance, Fra Bartolommeo.
In 1505 he was
summoned to Rome by Pope Julius II to carve a pair of marble tombs in
the choir of S. Maria del Popolo, which was being redesigned by
Bramante;
they resemble ancient Roman triumphal arches containing some eight statues
each. He followed this success with a group of the "Virgin and Child with
Saint Anne" (S. Agostino, Rome), based on Leonardo's variations on the
theme (e.g. the cartoon in the National Gallery, London).
From 1513 until
his death he was put in charge of the marble cladding of the Holy House
in the basilica of Loreto, carving two of the large narrative reliefs
personally, and supervising a team of younger sculptors. This commission
is one of the finest manifestations of High Renaissance architecture and
sculpture.
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