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Lorenzo Ghiberti

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Ghiberti, Lorenzo

 

Born about 1381 in Florence, died there Dec. 1, 1455. Italian sculptor and jeweler of the early Renaissance.

Ghiberti worked in Florence and in Siena (1416-17), Venice (1424-25), and Rome (up to 1416 and about 1430). His early works were bronze reliefs (mainly Gospel scenes) on the north, or second, baptistery doors (1404-24) in Florence and the bronze statues of St. John the Baptist (1412-15), Matthew (1419-22), and Stephen (1425-29) in the Or San Michele Church in Florence; they have preserved their medieval ornateness and jewel-like delicacy. The connection with medieval art is also revealed in the relief compositions, whose spatial closeness is dictated by the four-petal frames (quatrefoils). During his mature period, Ghiberti came under the influence of Donatello and F. Brunelleschi. From 1425 to 1452, while Ghiberti was working on the east, or third, doors of the Florentine baptistery, his work came under the influence of the principles of Renaissance art. This work, the most important by Ghiberti, consists often reliefs representing biblical scenes against a background of architectural forms and landscapes. The work is notable for its poetic and lifelike forms and for the plastic richness of the surroundings and the human figures. The use of the knowledge of antique art and the discoveries of his contemporaries in the area of linear perspective, as well as the virtuosity of the treatment of the material in creating the finest relief gradations from the highest to the lowest, lend Ghiberti’s compositions spatial depth, rhythmic multiplicity of images, and a musical fluidity of lines. Ghiberti also created the reliefs on the baptistery font in Siena (bronze, 1417-27). No examples of Ghiberti’s work as a jeweler have been preserved.

WORKS

Commentarii, 1447-1455 (manuscript).
Lorenzo Ghiberti’s Denkwürdigkeiten (I Commentarii) … , vols. 1-2. Edited by J. von Schlosser. Berlin, 1912. Incomplete Russian translation: Commentarii: Zapiski ob ital’ianskom iskusstve. Annotated and with a preface by A. Guber. Moscow, 1938.

REFERENCE

Krautheimer, R., and T. Krautheimer-Hess. Lorenzo Ghiberti. Princeton, N. J., 1956.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Caption: A woman looks at the "Gates of Paradise," 15th-century bronze doors by Lorenzo Ghiberti.
Lorenzo Ghiberti era lui stesso pittore--un'arte in cui continuava ad esercitarsi, disegnando gran parte delle vetrate del Duomo--e nelle porte a nord come in quelle 'del Paradiso', a est, introduce effetti pittorici di estrema raffinatezza e 'attualita': il decorativismo tardo-gotico dello stile internazionale della fine del XIV secolo, nelle prime porte, e la nuova razionalita prospettica nelle seconde.
There are bas-relief * sculptures that are often mounted on walls or doors, like Lorenzo Ghiberti's "Gates of Paradise" bronze doors, which depict scenes from the Old Testament.
FOR 27 YEARS LORENZO GHIBERTI WORKED on a pair of doors for the baptistry of Florence's cathedral.
Over the ensuing centuries, Pliny's text was widely circulated and quoted by artists and writers such as Lorenzo Ghiberti (1378--1455) in Italy, Samuel van Hoogstraten (1627--1678) in the Netherlands, and Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804--1864) in America.
As with the works of a number of Italian Renaissance artists, Lorenzo Ghiberti's art contained scientific elements.
The winner, Lorenzo Ghiberti, devoted over forty years to completing some of the most magnificent bronze door panels in all of Christendom.
O, and Lorenzo Ghiberti's respective bronze panels depicting the Sacrifice of Isaac, made for the Baptistery doors competition of 1401, are displayed below the wooden model (1420-40) of Brunelleschi's dome for the Cathedral of Santa Maria del Fiore--a shrine to the birth of the Renaissance in the revival of Greco-Roman forms and the discovery of scientific perspective.
During the Italian Renaissance the bronze doors of the Florentine Baptistery became an iconic piece of art, the result of a legendary competition between Filippo Brunelleschi and Lorenzo Ghiberti, which Ghiberti won.
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