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  1. 21 de abr. de 2024 · Portret van Francesco Giamberti da Sangallo (1404-1482). Architect en musicus, vader van Giuliano de Sangallo. Buste, profiel naar links, op de achtergrond een landschap. Onderaan de voorstelling op een plint ligt een blad met muziek. Onderdeel, met SK-C-1368, van een diptiek. Creation. Artist. painter: Piero di Cosimo;

  2. 25 de nov. de 2016 · Language Label Description Also known as; English: Francesco da Sangallo. Italian artist (1494-1576)

  3. Medalist: Francesco da Sangallo (Italian, 1494–1576) 1551. Portrait medal of Paolo Giovio (obverse); Giovio Raising a Man from a Grave (reverse) Francesco da Sangallo (Italian, 1494–1576) model ca. 1552 (probably a later cast) Resources for Research.

  4. St. John Baptizing. To the principal civic heroes of Florence —Hercules and David—a third must be added: John the Baptist, patron saint of the city. Sangallo's bronze figure of this saint in the act of baptizing, a masterpiece of sixteenth-century Florentine sculpture, is the most profoundly expressive Renaissance bronze in The Frick ...

  5. Early life. Giuliano da Sangallo (né Giuliano Giamberti) was born c. 1445 in Florence. His father, Francesco Giamberti, was a woodworker and an architect who worked closely with Cosimo de' Medici. This proved to be helpful to Giuliano and his brother, Antonio, later in life as it helped them to develop a close working relationship and friendship with Cosimo's grandson, Lorenzo de' Medici.

  6. Other articles where Francesco da Sangallo is discussed: Sangallo family: Francesco da Sangallo, known as Il Margotta (1494–1576), the son of Giuliano, was primarily a sculptor whose style was characterized by minute detailing. He sculpted the tomb of Bishop Marzi-Medici (1546) in the church of Santissima Annunziata, Florence, as well as the tomb of Bishop…

  7. Francesco da Sangallo was an Italian High Renaissance sculptor, the son of the architect and sculptor Giuliano da Sangallo. Sangallo was born in Florence. His father took him at the age of ten to Rome where, in 1506, he was present at the identification of the Laocoön group, an event he described in a letter written in 1567, towards the end of his life.