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Abduction of a Sabine
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Abduction of a Sabine

18th century

Medium

Bronze

Dimensions

Overall (confirmed): 23 1/4 × 9 1/8 × 10 3/8 in. (59.1 × 23.2 × 26.4 cm)

Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

Credit

Gift of Irwin Untermyer, 1970

Classification

Sculpture-Bronze

Department

European Sculpture and Decorative Arts

Culture

Italian, possibly Florence

Rights

Public Domain

About Giambologna

1529–1608Kingdom of France

Born and trained in Flanders (Douai, his birthplace, is now in France but was once in Flanders), Giambologna traveled to Italy in 1550 to study Classical and Renaissance sculpture. There, he became court sculptor of the Medici Dukes. He was famed for compositional sophistication, sensuous, tactile treatment of human body, and sheer technical virtuosity. He was extremely influential because the Medici gave his works as diplomatic gifts and his style was thus known throughout Europe. His style also spread through his many students, who studied in Florence with him, and returned to Northern Europe. He died in Florence, Italy in 1608.