Pintura Identificación:: 28346
Bacchus Baco 1868
watercolour 49.5 x 37 cm
(19 1/2 x 14 5/8 in)
Private collection (mk63) 1868 acuarela 49,5 X 37 cm (19 1/2 X 14 5/8 en) la colección Privada (mk63) English Pre-Raphaelite Painter, 1840-1905
Pintura Identificación:: 28444
Bacchus Baco 1867
Oil on paper laid on to Canvas 50.8 x 37.5 cm (20 x 14 3/4 in)
Birmingham City Museum and Art Gallery (mk63) 1867 Petróleo en el papel colocado en a la Lona 50,8 X 37,5 cm (20 X 14 3/4 en) Museo de Ciudad de Birmingham y Galería de arte (mk63) English Pre-Raphaelite Painter, 1840-1905
Pintura Identificación:: 29938
Bacchus Baco mk67
Oil on canvas
37 3/8x33 7/16in
Uffizi,Gallery
el Petróleo mk67 en la lona 37 Uffizi 3/8x33 7/16in, la Galería Italian Baroque Era Painter, ca.1571-1610
Pintura Identificación:: 33251
Bacchus Baco mk83
1589-1596
oil on canvas
95x85cm
mk83 1589-1596 engrasan en la lona 95x85cm Italian Baroque Era Painter, ca.1571-1610
Pintura Identificación:: 33572
Bacchus Baco mk86
c.1598
Oil on canvas
98x85cm
Florence,Galleria degli Uffizi
mk86 C. 1598 Petróleo en la lona 98x85cm Florencia, degli de Galería Uffizi Italian Baroque Era Painter, ca.1571-1610
Pintura Identificación:: 40401
Bacchus Baco mk156
c.1596
Oil on canvas
95x85cm
mk156 C. 1596 Petróleo en la lona 95x85cm Italian Baroque Era Painter, ca.1571-1610
Pintura Identificación:: 41022
Bacchus Baco mk159
Oil on canvas
transferred from panel
191x161.3cm
el Petróleo mk159 en la lona transferida de pone panel 191x161.3cm Flemish Baroque Era Painter, 1577-1640
Pintura Identificación:: 63029
Bacchus 1497 Marble, height: 203 cm Museo Nazionale del Bargello, Florence At the age of 21 Michelangelo went to Rome for the first time. We still possess two of the works he created in this period (Bacchus and Piet?; others must have been lost for he spent five years there. The statue of Bacchus was commissioned by the banker Jacopo Galli for his garden and he wanted it fashioned after the models of the ancients. The body of this drunken and staggering god gives an impression of both youthfulness and of femininity. Vasari says that this strange blending of effects is the characteristic of the Greek god Dionysus. But in Michelangelo's experience, sensuality of such a divine nature has a drawback for man: in his left hand the god holds with indifference a lionsksin, the symbol of death, and a bunch of grapes, the symbol of life, from which a Faun is feeding. Thus we are brought to realize, in a sudden way, what significance this miracle of pure sensuality has for man: living only for a short while he will find himself in the position of the faun, caught in the grasp of death, the lionskin. The statue was transferred to Florence in 1572. Artist: MICHELANGELO Buonarroti Painting Title: Bacchus , 1501-1550 Painting Style: Italian , sculpture Type: mythological b Caprese 1475 d Rome 1564