What fascinates me most about the sculptures at the Bargello — and especially these examples by Verrocchio, Donatello, and della Robbia — is not just their beauty, but their specificity. They are idealised, yes. But they are not generic. Each face carries something recognisable, almost contemporary: a tilt of the head, a suggestion of character, a quiet self-awareness. These are not abstractions of “man” — they are individuals. Standing in the large hall on the first floor, it becomes clear that something quite radical is happening here. Because this is not only about technique, or even about rediscovering antiquity. It is about a shift in attention. From the symbolic to the particular. From the type to the person. The Renaissance is often described as placing “man at the centre”. But that can sound like a slogan. In these sculptures, it feels more precise. Not man in general. But this man. This face. This expression. And perhaps that is the deeper break: the recognition that individuality itself is worthy of representation.

04/21/2026 13:28:52


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