-
Ascanio Condivi (1525 – 10
December 1574) was an
Italian painter and writer.
Generally regarded as a
mediocre artist, he is
primarily remembered as the...
- Michelangelo, p. 11 C. Clément, Michelangelo, p. 5 A.
Condivi, The Life of Michelangelo, p. 5 A.
Condivi, The Life of Michelangelo, p. 9 Coughlan, Robert;...
-
scheme himself. This is
supported by Michelangelo's
biographer Ascanio Condivi's statement that the
artist read and
reread the Old
Testament while he was...
-
himself said to his biographer, the
compatriot and
Roman sculptor Ascanio Condivi: "Do you not know that
chaste women stay
fresh much more than
those who...
- in 1553 by his disciple,
Ascanio Condivi, and
reportedly is
based largely on Michelangelo's own recollections,
Condivi gives the
following description...
- its love of the grape" (according to Michelangelo's
biographer Ascanio Condivi). The
feline skin is
representative of both life and death. The feline...
-
Michelangelo had
painted St.
Anthony after a
print by Schongauer, and
Ascanio Condivi recorded that
Michelangelo had gone to a
market to draw fish scales, a...
- not do****ented by the
contemporary biographers of Michelangelo,
Ascanio Condivi and
Giorgio Vasari, some art
historians have
attributed the work to Michelangelo...
-
published in 1553 by his disciple,
Ascanio Condivi, and
largely was
based on Michelangelo's own recollections,
Condivi gives the
following description of the...
-
sculpture in the
Medici Gardens that
contained a
sleeping cupid.
Ascanio Condivi, the
Italian Painter,
described Michelangelo's work as "a god of love,...