Sansovino, Jacopo (Jacopo Tatti) (1486-1570)

Creator details

Name
Sansovino, Jacopo (Jacopo Tatti) (1486-1570)
Nationality
Italian
Biography
Born 2 January 1486; died 27 September 1570 or 27 November 1570. Jacopo was an important classicizing Florentine sculptor. His contribution to architecture, which he practiced in Venice after the Sack of Rome in 1527, is also of great significance. Through commissions, he competed directly with Michelangelo on a number of occasions. Notable works include his Bacchus (1511), St. James (1511) for Florence Cathedral, the Nichesola monument for Verona Cathedral, and the tribune reliefs and bronze sacristy door for S. Marco in Venice. Born Jacopo Tatti, he adopted the name of his teacher, Andrea Sansovino. During a time in Florence, he shared a studio with Andrea del Sarto, for whom he made small-scale models. In Florence, Rome, and Venice, Jacopo was friends with leading painters such as Titian, Tintoretto, and Lorenzo Lotto. Italian architect, sculptor, b. in Florence, d. in Venice.

Assets (43 in total)

The Sala Dorata, built 1537-88 (photo)
Bacchus, 1510 (marble)
Palazzo Corner, called Ca' Grande, begun after 1545 (photo)
Jupiter (bronze)
Statue of Mercury, 1537-46 (bronze)
Funeral monument in tribute to Cardinal Ascanio Maria Sforza (marble sculpture,1505-1507)
View of the Zecca (Mint), built 1537-45 (photo)
Palazzo Dolfin Manin, begun 1538 (photo)
Libreria Sansoviniana (Biblioteca Marciana) begun 1537 (photo)
Resurrection of a drowned girl, 1563 (marble) (see also 359181)
Sala di Lettura, built in 1537-88 (photo)
St John the Baptist (Marble sculpture, 16th century)

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