In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago — check current display status with the museum.
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Alessandro Vittoria translated into bronze the flickering light of Venetian Renaissance paintings. Working in wax (from which the finished bronze was then cast), he manipulated this relief’s form and edges to catch the light. The result is a highly animated surface in which figures, drapery, clouds, and sky seem to move with excitement, heightening the drama of the archangel Gabriel’s announcement that Mary will bear God’s son. Fully sculpted in the round, the archangel’s arm points to the scene’s smallest feature: a dove, representing the Holy Spirit. This sculpture was commissioned by Hans Fugger, a member of a prominent Augsburg banking family, to decorate an altarpiece for the chapel of his family’s castle.
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Circle of Jacopo Sansovino — The Institution of the Rosary
Workshop of Massimiliano Soldani-Benzi — Pietà
Jean-Louis Lemoyne — The Fear of Love
Manifattura Ginori (Sesto Fiorentino, Italy) — The Abduction
Jean Léon Gérôme — Anacreon with the Infants Bacchus and Cup
Bartolomeo Ammanati — Allegorical Figure
Olin Levi Warner — Twilight
Bernt Notke — The Vision of Joseph
Filippo Parodi — Pietà
Giovanni Gia — Draped Figure
Anonymous, Italian, Roman-Bolognese, 17th century — Design f
German — Putto