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JACOPO SANSOVINO (1477—1570) , See also: Italian sculptor, was called Sansovino after his master See also: Andrea, his See also: family name being Tatti
.
He became a pupil of Andrea in 1500, and in 1510 accompanied him to See also: Rome, devoting himself there to the study of See also: antique sculpture
.
See also: Julius II. employed him to restore damaged statues, and he made a full-sized copy of the See also: Laocoon See also: group, which was afterwards cast in See also: bronze, and is now in the Uffizi at Florence
.
In 1511 he returned to Florence, and began the statue of St See also: James the Elder, which is now in a niche in one of the
See also: great piers of the Duomo
.
He carved a nude figure of " Bacchus and See also: Pan," now in the Bargello, near the "Bacchus" of Michelangelo, from the contrast with which it suffers much
.
Soon afterwards Jacopo returned to Rome, and designed for his See also: fellow-citizens the See also: grand See also: church of S
.
Giovanni dei Fiorentini, which was carried out 'by Antonio
See also: Sangallo the younger
.
A marble group of the " Madonna and See also: Child," heavy in See also: style, now at the west of S
.
Agostino, was his next important See also: work
.
In 1527 Jacopo fled from the See also: sack of Rome to Venice, where he was welcomed by See also: Titian and Pietro See also: Aretino; henceforth till his See also: death tie was occupied in adorning Venice with magnificent buildings and many second-See also: rate pieces of sculpture Among the latter Jacopo's poorest See also: works are the See also: colossal statues of "See also: Neptune" and " See also: Mars" on the grand See also: staircase of the ducal palace
.
His best are the bronze doors of the sacristy of St Mark, cast in 1562; inferior to these are the series of six bronze reliefs round the choir of the same church
.
In 1565 he completed a small bronze See also: gate with a graceful See also: relief of " Christ surrounded by Angels "; this gate shuts off the altar of the Reserved See also: Host in the choir of St Mark's
.
Jacopo's chief claim to distinction rests upon the numerousSee also: fine Venetian buildings which he designed, such as the public library, the mint, the Scuola della Misericordia, the Palazzo de' Cornari and the Palazzo Delfino, with its magnificent staircase—the last two both on the grand canal
.
Among his ecclesiastical works the chief were the church of S
.
Fantino, that of S
.
Martino, near the See also: arsenal, the Scuola di S
.
Giovanni degli Schiavoni and, finest of all, the church, now destroyed (see VENICE), of S
.
Geminiano, a very See also: good specimen of the Tuscan and Composite orders used with the graceful freedom of the See also: Renaissance
.
In 1S45 the roof of the public library, which he was then constructing, See also: fell in; on this account he was imprisoned, fined and dismissed from the office of chief architect of the See also: cathedral, to which he had been appointed by a decree of the signoria on the 7th of See also: April 1529
.
Owing to the intervention of Titian, Pietro Aretino and others, he was soon set at liberty, and in 1549 he was restored to his See also: post
.
He did good service for St Mark's by encircling its failing domes with bands of iron
.
Sansovino's architectural works have much beauty of proportion and See also: grace of See also: ornament, a little marred in some cases by an excess of sculptured decoration, though the See also: carving itself is always beautiful, both in design and execution
.
He used the classic orders with great freedom and tasteful invention
.
His numerous pupils were mostly men of but little talent
.
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