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Marble
One of the key features of Renaissance art was the use of geometric and symmetric shapes to create a sense of balance and harmony. Michelangelo’s Pietà is shaped like a triangle, with Mary’s head at the top and Christ’s body in her lap forming the base.
Pietà (marble sculpture) … The Pietà was a popular subject among northern european artists. It means Pity or Compassion, and represents Mary sorrowfully contemplating the dead body of her son which she holds on her lap. This sculpture was commissioned by a French Cardinal living in Rome.
A Renaissance Masterpiece At the forefront of this trend, Michelangelo crafted sculptures that focused on balance, detail, and a lifelike yet idealized approach to the human form. The Pietà perfectly reflects these Renaissance ideals. In order to suggest balance, he rendered the sculpture as a pyramid.
Now Italian experts say they are sure it is an original Michelangelo, the Ragusa Pieta, worth perhaps $300 million.
Six gold florins clustered in a display case represent Michelangelo’s wages when he started work as an apprentice in 1488, at the age of 13. A servant at the time would have earned 10 florins a year. By 1497 he was being paid 133 florins as a first instalment to carve his Pieta sculpture in Rome.
The Pieta was created by Michelangelo in 1498 and it was requested by a French Cardinal to decorate his tomb. … Michelangelo was a highly religious man who primarily worked for the Catholic church. He therefore believed in piety and the sin of lust. In his Pieta Mary is seen as a youthful figure cradling her adult son.
The Pieta is one of several representations used in Biblical art to depict a grieving Virgin Mary (the Mater Dolorosa). Another comes from the Stations of the Cross, when the weeping mother meets her son Jesus on the way to his Crucifixion at Calvary.
The incident in St. Peter’s caused a rush of people from the church for fear that a bomb had been discovered. The scare was unfounded. The Pope was told of the attack on the Pieta after he gave his benediction from a window of the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace.
Laszlo Toth
St. Peter’s Basilica
A pietà (Italian pronunciation: [pjeˈta]; meaning “piety”, “compassion”) is a subject in Christian art depicting the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of Jesus, most often found in sculpture.
Carrara marble
The first mass-produced toy marbles (clay) made in the US were made in Akron, Ohio, by S. C. Dyke, in the early 1890s. Some of the first US-produced glass marbles were also made in Akron, by James Harvey Leighton.