And then there is this boy. A glazed terracotta bust by Luca della Robbia, Busto di fanciullo, from somewhere around 1460–1470. I must have returned to this work five or six times over the past 15–30 years. At first, it was almost accidental. Later, it became intentional. Because something happens here that is different from the heroic bronzes and the carefully composed Renaissance ideals. This is not a type. Not an allegory. Not even quite an ideal. It is a child. When my own sons were the same age, I remember standing them beneath the sculpture and being struck — almost uncomfortably — by the resemblance. Not because they looked the same in any precise way, but because the expression felt familiar. The slightly uncertain gaze. The softness that has not yet become self-consciousness. It is easy to speak about the Renaissance as the rediscovery of the individual. But here, the thought becomes simpler. Children are the same across centuries. And perhaps that is why this work stays. Because it is not about Florence in the 15th century. It is about something that has not changed.

04/21/2026 13:43:01


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