- The
Equestrian Statue of
Gattamelata is an
Italian Renaissance sculpture by Donatello,
dating from 1453,
today in the
Piazza del
Santo in Padua, Italy...
-
Stefano of
Narni (1370 – 16
January 1443),
better known by his
nickname of
Gattamelata (meaning "Hone**** Cat"), was an
Italian condottiero of the Renaissance...
- (better
known as the
Gattamelata, or 'Honey-Cat'), who had died that year.
Designing and
planning his
Equestrian Monument of
Gattamelata probably began that...
-
statue of the
Italian Renaissance,
after Donatello's
equestrian statue of
Gattamelata (1453). In 1475, the
Condottiero Colleoni, a
former Captain General of...
- 1415–1450, when
Donatello created the
heroic bronze equestrian statue of
Gattamelata the condottiere,
erected in Padua. In fifteenth-century Italy, this became...
- the only two
large equestrian statues of the Renaissance, Donatello's
Gattamelata in
Padua and Verrocchio's
Bartolomeo Colleoni in Venice, and
became known...
- Sacramento, also
known as
Cappella Gattamelata), in the
right aisle,
houses the tomb of the
famous condottiero Gattamelata and of his son Giannantonio. The...
- the
person of
Erasmus of
Narni called Il
Gattamelata,
leading the war
against Milan until 1441. The
Gattamelata was
succeeded by the
leader Michele Attendolo...
- in
marble (1408–09) and
bronze (1440s), and his
Equestrian statue of
Gattamelata, as well as reliefs. A
leading figure in the
later period was Andrea...
-
continued in the
Renaissance by
examples such as Donatello's
statue of
Gattamelata (1453) in
Padua and Verrocchio's
statue of
Bartolomeo Colleoni (1488)...