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  1. Aug 3, 2022 · Naturally, the history of bronze begins with the Bronze Age (3300-1200BC). Despite its name, sculpture was not the first use of bronze in this period. No, when people discovered that they could make a stronger alloy by mixing copper with tin, they thought more pragmatically. As a result, the first uses of bronze were in the creation of tools ...

  2. marbleism.com › blog › History_of_Bronze_SculpturesHistory of Bronze Sculpture

    The Bronze Man and Centaur is an 8th century BC bronze sculpture, created in Greece during the mid-8th century BC, in the period of Archaic Greece. It is now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The sculpture was a posthumous gift of J. Pierpont Morgan given to the Metropolitan Museum in 1917.

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  4. The earliest known artistic uses of bronze have been traced to Asia where the technique known as lost-wax casting was used to create natural-looking pieces. The Dawn of Bronze Statues. Currently located in modern-day Pakistan, the prehistoric Dancing Girl is the oldest bronze sculpture on record, measuring at only 10.5 cm. However, it was the ...

  5. Mar 13, 2021 · The Art of Western Europe. The Atlantic Bronze Age is the period of approximately 1300 to 700 BCE that includes different cultures in Portugal, Andalusia, Galicia, and the British Isles. It is marked by economic and cultural exchange. Commercial contacts extended to Denmark and the Mediterranean.

  6. Mar 15, 2018 · The sculpture of ancient Greece from 800 to 300 BCE took inspiration from Egyptian and Near Eastern monumental art, and evolved into a uniquely Greek vision of the art form. Greek artists captured the human form in a way never before seen where sculptors were particularly concerned with proportion, poise, and the idealised perfection of the ...

    • Mark Cartwright
  7. Many European cities had bronze foundries, but Florence saw the first true flowering of bronze sculpture. The main monuments there are the two pairs of bronze doors by Lorenzo Ghiberti on the Baptistery (1404–24 and 1425–52) and several key works of Donatello. To the north, as in the Vischer family’s Shrine of Saint Sebaldus in Nuremberg ...

  8. Fig.6. Henry Young & Co’s foundry, 1881, with one of the bronze sphinxes for Cleopatra’s Needle being cast (National Portrait Gallery Library, Illustrated London News, 16 April 1881). Cox & Sons set up their new bronze statue foundry at Thames Ditton in 1875, under the direction of James Moore as foreman.

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