Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Raffaele Riario, Jacopo Galli, and Michelangelo’s Bacchus, 1471–1572
View through CrossRef
On Michelangelo’s first day in Rome, in June 1496, Cardinal Raffaele Riario asked him if he could create ‘something beautiful’ in competition with the antique. The twenty-one-year old sculptor responded to this unique challenge with the statue of Bacchus now in the Bargello museum. This statue, as well as the Sleeping Cupid which first brought Michelangelo to Riario’s attention, have long been shrouded in mystery, and the Bacchus as well as its patron have long suffered from critical censure.
Through a comprehensive analysis of overlooked and previously-unpublished sources, this study sheds new light on the Sleeping Cupid, the Bacchus,and a fascinating period in the history of Renaissance Rome when the careers of Riario, Galli, and Michelangelo were closely intertwined. It considers the rise of the Riario dynasty starting with the election of Pope Sixtus IV in 1471, Riario’s partnership with Jacopo Galli in the reconstruction of the palace now known as the Palazzo della Cancelleria, the attempted sale of Michelangelo’s Sleeping Cupid in Rome as an antiquity, Riario’s patronage of the Bacchus, and the Bacchus’s displayin the house of the Galli up until its sale to the Medici in 1572. Taking a broad, interdisciplinary perspective, it offers a fundamental reassessment of Cardinal Riario’s career as a patron, of Jacopo Galli’s role as an intermediary for both Riario and Michelangelo, and of Michelangelo’s collaboration with Riario and Galli.
Title: Raffaele Riario, Jacopo Galli, and Michelangelo’s Bacchus, 1471–1572
Description:
On Michelangelo’s first day in Rome, in June 1496, Cardinal Raffaele Riario asked him if he could create ‘something beautiful’ in competition with the antique.
The twenty-one-year old sculptor responded to this unique challenge with the statue of Bacchus now in the Bargello museum.
This statue, as well as the Sleeping Cupid which first brought Michelangelo to Riario’s attention, have long been shrouded in mystery, and the Bacchus as well as its patron have long suffered from critical censure.
Through a comprehensive analysis of overlooked and previously-unpublished sources, this study sheds new light on the Sleeping Cupid, the Bacchus,and a fascinating period in the history of Renaissance Rome when the careers of Riario, Galli, and Michelangelo were closely intertwined.
It considers the rise of the Riario dynasty starting with the election of Pope Sixtus IV in 1471, Riario’s partnership with Jacopo Galli in the reconstruction of the palace now known as the Palazzo della Cancelleria, the attempted sale of Michelangelo’s Sleeping Cupid in Rome as an antiquity, Riario’s patronage of the Bacchus, and the Bacchus’s displayin the house of the Galli up until its sale to the Medici in 1572.
Taking a broad, interdisciplinary perspective, it offers a fundamental reassessment of Cardinal Riario’s career as a patron, of Jacopo Galli’s role as an intermediary for both Riario and Michelangelo, and of Michelangelo’s collaboration with Riario and Galli.
Related Results
Caterina Sforza
Caterina Sforza
Caterina Sforza (b. 1462/63–d. 1509) was the daughter of Galeazzo Maria Sforza (b. 1444–d. 1476), duke of Milan (r. 1467–1476), and his mistress Lucrezia Landriani (b. 1440/45–d. 1...
Un ricordo di Pier Francesco Galli al Cinema Modernissimo di Bologna il 9 novembre 2024
Un ricordo di Pier Francesco Galli al Cinema Modernissimo di Bologna il 9 novembre 2024
Il 9 novembre 2024, giorno in cui Pier Francesco Galli avrebbe compiuto 93 anni, al Cinema Mo-dernissimo della Cineteca di Bologna, alla presenza di più di 200 persone venute da va...
Roma caput mundi: Rome’s local antiquities as symbol and source
Roma caput mundi: Rome’s local antiquities as symbol and source
It will consider different antiquarian strategies in Rome adopted during a window of time (from the second half of the fifteenth century into the early sixteenth) when antiquity wa...
Michelangelo's Laurentian Library: Drawings and Design Process
Michelangelo's Laurentian Library: Drawings and Design Process
Re-examination of a key group of Michelangelo's sketches for the Laurentian Library, located in the monastic complex of Florence's S. Lorenzo, offers a new understanding of his des...
Michelangelo Buonarroti: Catholic Reformation Piety
Michelangelo Buonarroti: Catholic Reformation Piety
Abstract
Michelangelo’s entire working life, from the beginning of the sixteenth century into its sixth decade, occurs in the midst of reforming religious current...
Tracce: La psicoanalisi e l'istituzione psicoanalitica in Italia. Carlo Viganň intervista Pier Francesco Galli
Tracce: La psicoanalisi e l'istituzione psicoanalitica in Italia. Carlo Viganň intervista Pier Francesco Galli
- Carlo Viganň interviews Pier Francesco Galli on the history of psychotherapy and psychoanalysis in Italy in the 1950s and 1960s. Pier Francesco Galli mentions the quarterly journ...
Music, Bacchus, and Freedom
Music, Bacchus, and Freedom
Nietzsche points out in The Birth of Tragedy (1872, rev. 1886) that modern Dionysiac music began with Beethoven’s symphonic music and matured in Wagner’s music drama. Yet his accou...
A Project by Michelangelo for the Ambo(s) of Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
A Project by Michelangelo for the Ambo(s) of Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
A group of Michelangelo's architectural drawings preserved in the Ashmolean and in the British Museum contains several detailed studies for a tall, semi-octagonal structure. Wherea...

