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Costantino Corti (1823/1824–1873) was a Milanese sculptor who exhibited at Brera and in Florence, London, and Paris. Corti was most noted for his colossal statue Lucifer. He also produced statues commemorating Federico Borromeo, Conrad of Swabia,[1] and the astronomer Giuseppe Piazzi.[2]

Engraving of the colossal statue Lucifer by Costantino Corti
Engraving of the colossal statue Lucifer by Costantino Corti

Works


Corti's marble Lucifer (sometimes titled as Satan) was commissioned by the Count d'Aquila, brother of the former king of Naples. At the end of the 19th century, a traveler and amateur critic offered this assessment of the work:

Corti makes no vulgar Satan with horns, hoofs, and tail, the superlatively ugly monster of medievalism, but a veritable fallen Son of the Morning; majestic in form, strong of limb, determined of will, supernal in figure, but sinister of aspect: a being enveloped in doubt, despair, and guilt; sufficiently attractive in mien to cast a spell over men or draw their sinful yearnings toward his by force of congenial sympathy.[3]

Lucifer was reviewed by Francesco dall' Ongaro at rhapsodic length as a worthy representation of the Satanic ideal shared in the literary works of John Milton or Lord Byron. Dall' Ongaro found the figure "androgynous," in keeping with the theological view that gender came into existence only with the creation of human beings and was not a characteristic of angels.[4] The sculpture received notice for its "extraordinary vigor."[5]

Corti's monument to Cardinal Borromeo was commissioned in 1861 for the plaza of the Biblioteca Ambrosiana. The statue was completed in 1864, and dedicated the following year.[6] The statue of Giuseppe Piazzi, dedicated in 1871, is located in the main plaza of Ponte in Valtellina, the astronomer's birthplace.[7]


Sources





Notes


  1. It is unclear whether the subject was Conrad III of Germany or Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor.
  2. Nuove effemeridi Siciliane di scienze, lettere ed arti (Palermo, 1871), vol. 3, p. 480 online.
  3. James Jackson Jarves, Art Thoughts: The Experiences and Observations of an American Amateur in Europe (Boston, 1896), p. 174 online.
  4. Francesco dall' Ongaro, L'arte italiana a Parigi nell'esposizione universale del 1867 (Florence, 1869), pp. 137–145.
  5. Con vigore straordinario, C. Jacopo Cavalluci, Manuale di storia della scultura (Turin, 1884), p. 404.
  6. Giuseppe Mongeri, "Monumento al Cardinale Federico Borromeo," in L'arte in Milano (Milan, 1872), p. 523 online. See also Guida sommaria per il visitatore della Biblioteca Ambrosiana (Milan, 1907), p. 25 online.
  7. Guida alla Valtellina ed alle sue acque minerali (Sondrio, 1884) p. 239 online.

На других языках


- [en] Costantino Corti

[es] Constantino Corti

Constantino Corti (Belluno 1824 - † Milán 1873), fue un escultor italiano.

[fr] Costantino Corti

Costantino Corti (né en 1823[1] et mort en 1873) est un sculpteur italien originaire de Milan, dont l’œuvre la plus connue est une sculpture colossale de Lucifer (parfois intitulée Satan) qui fut exposée lors de l’exposition universelle de 1867[2] à Paris. On lui doit également plusieurs monuments commémoratifs, dont un dédié à Federico Borromeo et un autre à Giuseppe Piazzi.



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