loader from loading.io

Episode 332 - The Life of Antonio Canova

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Release Date: 05/28/2025

Episode 336 - Canova’s “Paolina Bonaparte as Venus Victrix” show art Episode 336 - Canova’s “Paolina Bonaparte as Venus Victrix”

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Napoleon’s younger sister, Paolina Bonaparte, married Prince Camillo Borghese in 1803. One year later the prince commissioned Antonio Canova to carve his new wife as the mythological goddess of chastity, Diana. The licentious Paolina laughed off the suggestion claiming that no one would be believe her a virgin and chose to be represented scandalously as the semi-nude Venus instead. 

info_outline
Episode 335 - Canova’s “Perseus Triumphant” show art Episode 335 - Canova’s “Perseus Triumphant”

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Carved in only a few months between 1800-1801, Canova’s “Perseus Triumphant” is one of history’s great sculptures. It exists in several versions, the most important of which are in the Vatican and Metropolitan Museums. Clearly inspired by Cellini’s earlier version, Canova also depicts the Greek hero as he contemplates his victory over the Gorgon as he stares at her severed head. 

info_outline
Episode 334 - Canova’s “Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker” show art Episode 334 - Canova’s “Napoleon as Mars the Peacemaker”

Rebuilding The Renaissance

In 1802, Napoleon courted Antonio Canova to go to Paris to make a bust of him. Four years later, Canova instead completed an 11ft. (3.5m) free-standing idealized nude statue depicting Napoleon as the Roman god of war, Mars. Surprisingly, Napoleon was not pleased with the sculpture, describing it as “too athletic.” 

info_outline
Episode 333 - Canova’s “Cupid and Psyche” show art Episode 333 - Canova’s “Cupid and Psyche”

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Carved by Antonio Canova in 1787 and today located in the Louvre Museum in Paris, the Neoclassical sculpture of “Cupid and Psyche” is one of history’s most beautiful and popular sculptures. The romantic sculpture depicts Cupid cradling the head of his lover after reviving her from a supernatural slumber, while she reaches up to him preparing to receive a kiss. 

info_outline
Episode 332 - The Life of Antonio Canova show art Episode 332 - The Life of Antonio Canova

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Antonio Canova was Europe’s most famous artist round the year 1800. His sublime Neoclassical style sculptures – such as “Cupid and Psyche,” “”Perseus with the Head of Medusa,” and the “The Venus Victrix (Paolina Bonaparte)” - are some of the most beautiful in the history of art. This podcast will explore the life and career of the great Italian sculptor. 

info_outline
Episode 331 - The Ceiling Fresco of Sant’Ignazio in Rome show art Episode 331 - The Ceiling Fresco of Sant’Ignazio in Rome

Rebuilding The Renaissance

One of Rome’s most spectacular works of art is the illusionistic fresco that covers the ceiling of the church Sant’Ignazio. It was painted in 1685, covers nearly 40m of ceiling surface and depicts the “Glorification of St. Ignatius of Loyola” in an extraordinary example of trompe-l’oeil perspectival painting. 

info_outline
Episode 330 - Rome: The Capuchin Crypt show art Episode 330 - Rome: The Capuchin Crypt

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Located on the famous Via Veneto in Rome, Italy, the 17th-century Capuchin Crypt is one of the world’s most unique examples of funerary decoration. It consists of a series of rooms decorated with human bones! Each room has a different theme based on the type of bone used – skulls, pelvises, leg bones, etc., resulting in an absolutely fascinating – some might say macabre – display of human creativity!

info_outline
Episode 329 - The Spanish Steps show art Episode 329 - The Spanish Steps

Rebuilding The Renaissance

Built between 1723 and 1725, the Spanish Steps in Rome, Italy, are one of the most famous staircases in the world. Consisting of 135 stairs spread over different levels, the steps were immortalized in the famous movie “Roman Holiday” and today are one of the most popular destinations of the “eternal City.”

info_outline
Episode 328 - The Trevi Fountain (Rome) show art Episode 328 - The Trevi Fountain (Rome)

Rebuilding The Renaissance

The Trevi Fountain is arguably the world’s most famous fountain! It was designed in 1732 by the Roman architect Nicola Salvi for a competition staged by Pope Clement XII. Rushing water passes through massive allegorical sculptures and blocks of stones into a massive stone basin in a uniquely dramatic fashion. 

info_outline
Episode 327 - Answers to Open Questions XXIV show art Episode 327 - Answers to Open Questions XXIV

Rebuilding The Renaissance

From how many paintings Caravaggio produced, to visiting Florence at Easter time, to how form and color were applied in Renaissance painting, to an overlooked equestrian monument, to finding the wooden beams in Brunelleschi’s dome, to the model used by Leonardo da Vinci in three of his most famous paintings, and much, much more - this episode answers the very questions that you ask me about the great art, artists and history of the Italian Renaissance.

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Antonio Canova was Europe’s most famous artist round the year 1800. His sublime Neoclassical style sculptures – such as “Cupid and Psyche,” “”Perseus with the Head of Medusa,” and the “The Venus Victrix (Paolina Bonaparte)” - are some of the most beautiful in the history of art. This podcast will explore the life and career of the great Italian sculptor.