More than a few visÂiÂtors to FloÂrence make a beeÂline to the GalÂleÂria delÂl’AcÂcadÂeÂmia, and once inside, to MichelanÂgelo’s David, the most famous sculpÂture in the world. But how many of them, one wonÂders, then take the time to view the three othÂer Davids in that city alone? At the BargelÂlo, just ten minÂutes’ walk away, reside two more sculpÂtures of the young man who would be king of Israel and Judah, both of them by MichelanÂgelo’s felÂlow RenaisÂsance masÂter DonatelÂlo. The less renowned, he made of marÂble in the late fourÂteen-hunÂdreds; the more renowned, of bronze in the fourÂteen-forÂties, is the subÂject of the SmarthisÂtoÂry video at the top of the post.
“For a thouÂsand years, the ChrisÂtÂian West had looked to the soul as the place to focus. The body was seen as the path to corÂrupÂtion, and so it was not to be celÂeÂbratÂed,” says the video’s host Steven ZuckÂer. “What we’re seeÂing here is a return to ancient Greece and Rome’s love of the body, its respect for the body.”
And to the FloÂrenÂtines of the mid-fifÂteenth cenÂtuÂry, as co-host Beth HarÂris explains, this parÂticÂuÂlar body wasÂn’t just that of “King David from the Bible,” but that of their own repubÂlic as well. SeeÂing themÂselves as the David-like underÂdog vicÂtoÂriÂous over the Goliath that was the Duke of Milan, “they felt blessed and choÂsen by God” as the “heirs of the ancient Roman RepubÂlic.”
Whether or not most everyÂday citÂiÂzens of the FloÂrenÂtine RepubÂlic felt that way, the bankÂing Medici famÂiÂly, who effecÂtiveÂly ran the place for cenÂturies, sureÂly must have. Also at the BargelÂlo is anothÂer of the Davids they comÂmisÂsioned, sculptÂed in bronze by Andrea del VerÂrocÂchio in the fourÂteen-sevÂenÂties. “VerÂrocÂchio gives us a very self-assured young man,” says HarÂris, with the beauÂty to be expectÂed of a work of this genre, but also with a cerÂtain degree of anti-clasÂsiÂcist adoÂlesÂcent awkÂwardÂness. In that, the work conÂtrasts with Bernini’s, though both artists creÂatÂed a vicÂtoÂriÂous David, standÂing over the head of Goliath. MichelanÂgeÂlo, of course, did things quite difÂferÂentÂly thirÂty years latÂer, sculptÂing a David out of marÂble eterÂnalÂly steelÂing himÂself for the batÂtle, at just the moment when his colosÂsal foe comes into view.
DonatelÂlo, VerÂrocÂchio, and MichelanÂgelo’s Davids all date from the RenaisÂsance. The othÂer unigÂnorÂable sculpÂture in this traÂdiÂtion was creÂatÂed much latÂer, in the sixÂteen-twenÂties, and also far from FloÂrence. The David by Gian LorenÂzo BerniÂni, who would become synÂonyÂmous with the draÂmatÂic extravÂaÂgance of sevÂenÂteenth-cenÂtuÂry Rome, is “like a spring that’s about to unwind,” as ZuckÂer puts it. Unlike when we behold MichelanÂgelo’s conÂtemÂplaÂtive renÂdiÂtion, HarÂris adds, “here, we’re emoÂtionÂalÂly, bodÂiÂly involved,” not just because of the action pose, but also of the physÂiÂcal effort eviÂdent in the face. This was the Baroque era, when “the Catholic church is using art as a way to affirm and strengthÂen the faith of believÂers.” Ideas about the purÂpose of art may have changed in the four cenÂturies since, but that hasÂn’t stopped even the lessÂer-known Davids from receivÂing a steady stream of impressed visÂiÂtors.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Michelangelo’s David: The FasÂciÂnatÂing StoÂry Behind the RenaisÂsance MarÂble CreÂation
MichelanÂgeÂlo Entered a ComÂpeÂtiÂtion to Put a MissÂing Arm Back on LaoÂcoön and His Sons — and Lost
How Michelangelo’s David Still Draws AdmiÂraÂtion and ConÂtroÂverÂsy Today
New Video Shows What May Be Michelangelo’s Lost & Now Found Bronze SculpÂtures
School PrinÂciÂpal, Forced to Resign After StuÂdents Learn About Michelangelo’s “David,” VisÂits the RenaisÂsance StatÂue in FloÂrence
3D Scans of 7,500 Famous SculpÂtures, StatÂues & ArtÂworks: DownÂload & 3D Print Rodin’s Thinker, Michelangelo’s David & More
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.