5
Greatest
Sculptures
of all
time
![]() |
Bronze David |
1. Donatello (1386? - 1466)
Unquestionably the greatest sculptor of the early
Renaissance, Donatello [wiki]
was born in Florence, though he traveled widely and was famous throughout
Italy. Donatello had complete mastery of bronze, stone, wood, and terra cotta,
and nothing escaped his extraordinary capabilities: relief sculpture, nudes,
equestrian statues, groups of figures, and single figures seated or standing.
In fact, he reinvented the art of sculpture just as other contemporaries were
reinventing the art of painting, and his innovations and discoveries were
profoundly influential. Above all, Donatello seemed to be able to bring
sculpture to life by his ability to tell a story, combine realism and powerful
emotion, and create the impression that his figures were more than mere objects
of beauty for passive contemplation, but creations filled with energy and
thought, ready to spring into action.
![]() |
Pieta |
2. Michelangelo (1475 - 1564)
Clearly an outstanding genius, Michelangelo's [wiki]
influence dominated European art until Picasso changed the rules. A sculptor
first, painter and architect second, Michelangelo was a workaholic - a
melancholic, temperamental, and lonely figure. He had a profound belief in the
human form (especially the male nude) as the ultimate expression of human
spirituality, sensibility, and beauty. In fact, Michelangelo's early work shows
the human being as the measure of all things: idealized, muscular, confident,
and quasi-divine. Gradually that image becomes more expressive, more human,
less perfect, fallible, and flawed. He loved turning and twisting poses full of
latent energy, and faces that expressed the full range of human emotion.
Endlessly inventive, he never repeated a pose, although being a true Renaissance
man, he was proud to borrow from Greek and Roman precedents.
![]() |
Rape of Proserpina |
3. Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598 - 1680)
Bernini
[wiki] set sculpture free from its previous occupation with earthly gravity and
intellectual emotion, allowing it to discover a new freedom that permitted it
to move, soar, and have a visionary and theatrical quality. A child prodigy,
Bernini had a sparkling personality and brilliant wit (he wrote comedies) -
qualities that shine through his sculptures. He was also a true visionary
technically, able to carve marble so as to make it seem to move or have the
delicacy of the finest lace. At his best he blends sculpture, architecture, and
painting into an extravagant theatrical ensemble, especially in his fountains,
where the play of water and light over his larger-than-life human figures and
animals creates a vision that is literally out of this world.
![]() |
Thinker |
4. Auguste Rodin (1840 - 1917)
Rodin
[wiki] is the glorious, triumphant finale to the sculptural tradition that
starts with Donatello. He is rightly spoken of in the same breath as
Michelangelo, although they're very different: Michelangelo carved into marble
whereas Rodin molded with clay. A shy workaholic, untidy, and physically
enormous, Rodin emerged from impoverished beginnings. He became an
international celebrity and was deeply attractive to smart women. Rodin was
also well known for loving the fluidity of clay and plaster, and was able to
retain this quality even when his work was cast in bronze, thereby magically
releasing in his figures an extraordinary range of human feelings and a sense
of the unknown forces of nature.
![]() |
Endless Column |
5. Constantin Brancusi (1876 - 1957)
Brancusi [wiki] is
one of the seminal figures of 20th-century art with a profound influence on
sculpture and design. Born into a Romanian peasant family, he settled in Paris
in 1904, becoming a student of Rodin. Amazingly, Brancusi remained indifferent
to honor and fame. At the heart of his work is a tireless refinement and search
for purity. Never abstract, his work always references something recognizable
in nature. Brancusi believed in the maxim "Truth to materials," and
he always brought out the inherent quality of each material that he used. The
purity and simplicity of his form touch something very basic in the human
psyche, just as does, for example, the sound of the waves of the sea.
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