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Chapter 12 - Tullio Lombardo, Antonio Rizzo, and Sculptural Audacity in Renaissance Venice

from Part IV - Sculpture as Performance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2020

Amy R. Bloch
Affiliation:
State University of New York, Albany
Daniel M. Zolli
Affiliation:
Pennsylvania State University
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Summary

Tullio Lombardo’s Adam (ca. 1493; Fig. 154) and Antonio Rizzo’s sculpture of the same subject (ca. 1470s; Fig. 155) visualize a discourse about technical audacity in late fifteenth-century Venice, one left largely unarticulated by the conventions of humanist critique, which focused on mimesis, expression, and style. Sculptors – and viewers – however, were also attentive to, and enthralled by, feats of virtuosic and difficult carving. The interest in sculptural facture and risk appears in an increasing drive to sever figure from block, and to create ever-larger voids, damage-prone projecting elements, and complex interplays between positive and negative space in stone sculpture – to challenge, in other words, the structural limitations this material imposes. Some of the strongest echoes of these priorities are to be found not in the era’s artistic treatises or poetry, but rather in the enigmatic Hypnerotomachia Poliphili. The tome was published by the Aldine press in Venice in 1499, by which time the rival workshops of Rizzo and the Lombardo family (Pietro [ca. 1430–1515], and sons Tullio [ca. 1455–1532] and Antonio [ca. 1458–1516]) had transformed the city’s architectural and sculptural landscape with their respective oeuvres. Modern scholarship has certainly not overlooked either of the two sculptures of Adam or the Hypnerotomachia, but it has tended to focus on questions of their iconography, on their relation to the antique, and, in the case of the two sculptures, on comparing their differing physiognomies and styles.1 This essay considers the two works as manifestations of a competition centered upon technical prowess and ambition – that is, as sculptural performances.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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References

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Adam by Tullio Lombardo, special issue of the Metropolitan Museum Journal 49 (2014).Google Scholar
Colonna, Francesco. Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, eds. Ariani, Marco and Gabriele, Mino, two vols. (Milan: Adelphi, 2006).Google Scholar
Colonna, Francesco. Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, eds. Pozzi, Giovanni and Ciapponi, Lucia, two vols. (Padua: Antenore, 1980).Google Scholar
Gauricus, Pomponius. De sculptura, ed. Cutolo, Paolo (Naples: Edizioni Scientifiche, 1999).Google Scholar
Luchs, Alison. Tullio Lombardo and Ideal Portrait Sculpture in Renaissance Venice, 1490–1530 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995).Google Scholar
Pincus, Debra. The Arco Foscari: The Building of a Triumphal Gateway in Fifteenth Century Venice (Ph.D. dissertation, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, 1976).Google Scholar
Pozzi, Giovanni and Ciapponi, Lucia. “La cultura figurativa di Francesco Colonna e l’arte veneta,” Lettere italiane 14 (1962): 151–69.Google Scholar
Schulz, Anne Markham. The Sculpture of Tullio Lombardo (London: Harvey Miller, 2014).Google Scholar
Schulz, Anne Markham. Antonio Rizzo: Sculptor and Architect (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1983).Google Scholar
Sheard, Wendy Stedman. The Tomb of Andrea Vendramin in Venice by Tullio Lombardo (Ph.D. dissertation, Yale University, 1971).Google Scholar

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