POLLAIUOLO, ANTONIO DEL AND PIERO DEL


Meaning of POLLAIUOLO, ANTONIO DEL AND PIERO DEL in English

born Jan. 17, 1432/33, Florence died Feb. 4, 1498, Rome born 1443, Florence died 1496, Rome "Hercules and Antaeus," bronze statuette by Antonio Pollaiuolo, c. 1475; in the 1/4 Pollaiuolo also spelled Pollajuolo, original names Antonio e Piero di Jacopo d'Antonio Benci Italian brothers who, as sculptors, painters, engravers, and goldsmiths, produced myriad works together under a combined signature. The Pollaiuolo brothers had significant influence on the development of Florentine art, and their workshop is regarded as one of the most important in Florence during the late 15th century. The brothers received the name of Pollaiuolo because their father was alleged to have been a poulterer (from pollaio, "hen coop"), though he was probably a goldsmith. Antonio learned goldsmithing and metalworking from either his father or Andrea del Castagno. Piero probably learned painting from Andrea del Castagno and became his brother's associate in goldsmithing, painting, sculpture, and engraving. After 1460 the two collaborated consistently, and the individual contributions of each are frequently difficult to determine. Their Florentine commissions included the altarpiece in the Chapel of the Cardinal of Portugal in S. Miniato al Monte and the "Martyrdom of St. Sebastian" (1475) for the Pucci Chapel in the church of SS. Annunziata. In 1484 they went to Rome, where their works included the tomb of Pope Sixtus IV (1484-93) in the Vatican Grottoes of St. Peter's and, in the final years of their lives, the tomb of Pope Innocent VIII (1493-97), also in St. Peter's. "The Battle of the Nudes," engraving by Antonio Pollaiuolo; in the Metropolitan Museum 1/4 Antonio Pollaiuolo is recognized individually as a superb draftsman whose mastery of line is best exemplified in his renderings of the human figure in motion; he was among the first artists to practice anatomical dissection in the study of the human form. His contributions to landscape representation were also significant. Notable works include his engraving "Battle of the Nudes" (c. 1470; see photograph) and the bronze statuette "Hercules and Antaeus" (c. 1475). The individual works of Piero are regarded as less artistically significant than those of his brother. His principal works were his "Coronation of the Virgin," an altarpiece painted in 1483 (in the choir of the cathedral at San Gimignano); his "Three Saints," an altarpiece; and "Prudence" (both at the Uffizi Gallery).

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.