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Windows Live® Search Results Jacopo Della QuerciaEncyclopedia Article
Jacopo Della Quercia (1374-1438), one of the earliest Italian Renaissance sculptors. He is best known for the Fonte Gaia (1419; now in Palazzo Pubblico, Siena), the fountain he carved for the public square of Siena, the city of his birth. It has now been replaced by a copy. His earliest known sculpture, the tomb (1406) of Ilaria del Carretto in Lucca Cathedral, is entirely Renaissance in conception and execution. It is in the form of a Roman sarcophagus, with winged cherubs bearing heavy garlands carved in extremely high relief around the sides. The serene effigy of Ilaria lies on the lid, swathed in superbly carved folds of drapery, her face radiant with peace. A bronze relief, Zacharias in the Temple, for the font of the baptistery of Siena Cathedral was completed in 1430. His 15 biblical marble relief panels (begun 1425) in the portal of the church of San Petronio, Bologna, were still unfinished at the time of his death, but the Genesis scenes he sculpted for the portal are among his most striking creations, in the bold simplicity of their compositions, the sure handling of anatomy, and their effect of monumentality. These panels, and Jacopo's other works, were a direct inspiration to Michelangelo and other masters of the High Renaissance.
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