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Thursday, July 12, 2012

Apollo del Belvedere

Speranza


 
Domenico Rossi
Raccolta di Statue Antiche e Moderne data in Luce sotto i gloriosi auspici della Santita di N.S. Papa Clemente XI. Raccolta di Statue Antiche e Moderne

Roma, Gaetano Zenobi, 1704.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Bourdon

Detail.











 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Hendrick Goltzius' print of The Apollo Belvedere.

 Marcantonio Raimondi, at the Metropolitan Museum.













Human Figure
Human Figure drawings by Albrecht Durer.
De Symmetria Partium in Rectis Formis Humanorum Corporum / Underweysung der Messung (Multilingual Edition)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
William Hogarth The Analysis of Beauty.


















 Bouillon.



 1832 edition of The Penny Magazine.
 
The Apollo Was found at Anzio.



Carrara marble, which Pliny callas the marble of Luna.

The most probable hypothesis that it was made for Nero to adorn his sea villa at Anzio.



Johann Gerog Heck, Iconographic Encyclopaedia of Science, Literature, and Art, Tafeln 6.


Top Row Left to Right:
 
Hercules with the boy Telephus on his arm, in Rome,
Statue of the Antino del Belvedere
 Boy wrestling with a goose,
Meleagro 
  Germanico
  Apollo del Belvedere
  Laconte
Apollo Ignudo.

a fragment of a statue, posssibly Apollo, that was returned to Greece in 2007.

Carl Becker painted a painting of Pope Julius II viewing the newly found Apollo Belvedere, the image appeared as the frontispiece of The Romance of Roman Villas by Elizabeth W. Champney, from project Gutenberg.

 
Raphael, Dürer, and Marcantonio Raimondi: Copying and the Italian Renaissance Print
 
The Vatican Apollo from R. Ackerman's book.

 R. Ackerman's book.
A print 1870 Apollo Belvedere in the center and Triumph of the Emperor Titus; Apotheosis of Augustus; Julius Caesar; Augustus; Livia; Titus; Julia; Trajanus; Relief on the Column of Trajanus; Relief from the Arches of Trajanus.
.

.

Goltzius Apollo, Vatican Museum Apollo



The drawing depicts the statue called Apollo Belvedere (7.3 feet high), a Roman copy of a lost bronze original dated c. 350-325 BC by the Greek sculptor Leochares. The figure represents the Greek god Apollo after his defeat of the serpent Python using a bow and arrow. The figure’s taut muscles indicate that he has just released the arrow. -University College London


Napoleon and the Apollo Belvedere from the University of North Florida.


APOLLO BELVEDERE,  Blanchet


Leonardo Berizzi    Apollo of Belvedere (a copy of the press R. Morghen, G. Volpato, 1833) Ink on paper from Istituto di Belle Arti Tadini

Raffaello Morghen   Giovanni Volpato Apollo of Belvedere (from: Principij del disegno tratti dalle più eccellenti statue antiche pubblicati ed incisi da Giov. Volpato e Raffaele Morghen, Rome 1786) from Istituto di Belle Arti Tadini

Marcantonio Pasqualini (1614–1691) Crowned by Apollo, 1641 Andrea Sacchi (Italian, Roman, 1599–1661) from the Metropolitan Museum of Art


Hall at the Royal Academy, Somerset House from the Victoria and Albert Museum

Apollo Belvedere in a landscape.

Knight's pictorial gallery of arts, Boy Extracting a Thorn and Apollo Belvedere



Jan de Bisschop - Two Studies Of The Apollo Belvedere, And One Of The Gaul And His Wife

Apollo Belvedere by Alba C. Galvez

Denis Diderot's Encyclopedia

Another example of proportions from the Encyclopedia is in this post. And another on here.

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