| John G |
Jun 27th, 2002 06:53 PM |
The central sculptural "homage" to Michelangelo enshrined in the bronze version of the DAVID was a gift from the Intalian government to Florence for the Piazzale Michelangelo, which was designed by Guiseppe Poggi between 1865-70. Interestingly enough, a statue by Giovanni Dupre, of Michelangelo himself, was supposed to adorn the Piazzale, but his proposal was not accepted by the city. A statue of Michelangelo would have made for a better spectacle instead of the copy of DAVID, which has no real artistic validity.<BR><BR>The four allegoric figures beneath the copy of DAVID are copies from the Medici tombs.<BR><BR>The copy of David in Piazza Signoria has supposedly stood there since 1873, replacing the "real" DAVID which was finished in 1504.<BR><BR>Anyone who creates a copy of an original work is not an artist. Both copies of DAVID, both in Signoria and P. Michelangelo were cast and not "created" by anyone.
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