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Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
There was some amazing views in Cortona from Piazza Garibaldi.
Belvedere di Cortona
Scenic point
Santa Maria delle Grazie al Calcinaio
Chiesa di Santa Maria delle Grazie al Calcinaio
The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie al Calcinaio is a Catholic place of worship located in Calcinaio in Cortona , in the province of Arezzo .
According to Catholic believers, on Easter Sunday 1484 , an image of the Madonna and Child , painted on the wall of a tub used for tanning leather and known as the liming plant for the quicklime used for this purpose, began to work miracles. That image venerated as sacred is visible today in the high altar , most likely positioned on the site of the ancient tabernacle .
Following the growth of devotion of the faithful which also took the form of constant almsgiving, the art of the Calzolari, owner of the tanning, decided to erect a "sacred temple", in a place that posed uncommon difficulties for the construction, due both to the steep position of the land than in the presence of a stream. These and other problems were solved by Francesco di Giorgio Martini , the architect chosen by Luca Signorelli on behalf of the Guild of Calzolari.
Martini, one of the greatest architects of the Renaissance , accepted the assignment and drew up the project already in 1484 , shortly after having designed the church of San Bernardino in Urbino . The works began in 1485 and already at the end of the first quarter of the sixteenth century the church had reached its final appearance, at least on the outside. In fact, this is how it appears to us in a fresco by Papacello in Palazzone Passerini in Cortona datable to around 1525 , where the dome designed by the Florentine architect can also be seen raised Pietro di Domenico di Norbo and made from the drum between 1509 and 1514 .
The last interventions proceeded more slowly, so much so that the main portal was finished in 1543 , based on a project by Bernardino Covatti , and the execution of the floor dates back to 1549 (the current one is the result of a recent renovation).
The church was initially ( 1487 ) entrusted to the care of the Scopetini family , from whom it was taken in 1653 to aggregate it to the Bishop's Seminary, which was reopened in the premises of the suppressed convent adjacent to the church. Once the Seminary was closed ( 1674 ), after a period of abandonment it was restored and rearranged by the Piarists who reopened it for worship in 1730 . After the Piarists moved to the city ( 1777 ), the complex was returned to the Seminary, but it was too big a burden for the institute's finances. So in 1786 the title of parish of San Biagio a Salcotto was transferred to the church.
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
Fra Angelico and Benozzo Gozzoli began the decoration of the vault of the chapel in 1447. They painted only two sections: Christ in Judgment and Angels and prophets as they were summoned in the same year to the Vatican by Pope Nicholas V to paint the Niccoline Chapel. Work came to a halt until Perugino was approached in 1489. However, he never began. After being abandoned for about 50 years, the decoration of the rest of the vault was awarded to Luca Signorelli on 5 April 1499. He added the scenes with the Choir of the Apostles, of the Doctors, of the Martyrs, Virgins and Patriarchs.
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
Montepulciano, Italy
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
Orvieto Cathedral houses the San Brizio Chapel (more correctly the Capella della Madonna di San Brizio) - famous for the fresco cycle by Luca Signorelli (painted 1499 - 1503) depicting visions of paradise, hell and the end of the world. When you walk into the great space, remember that many of the people going there in the 1500s would have believed that the end of the world and the day of judgement were due at any moment. Talk about a fear driven religion - or was it just that Signorelli liked painting naked male bodies?
Europe 2018 (day 5), August 19, 2018.
Firenze / Florence.
Galleria degli Uffizi / Uffizi Gallery.
Crocifisso con Maria Maddalena / Crucifixion with Mary Magdalene (c. 1502-1505), Luca Signorelli (1455-1523).
©2018 - Lewis Brian Day. All rights reserved.
Not to be reproduced in any format or via any platform without express written permission.
Copyright protection asserted.
I primed Rootstein's Magaret, Mounia, Tracy, and Allesandra. I Dremeled and Bondoed Sayoko. Tracy still needs more work, noticed only after I had finished priming her. Sayoko had a bunch of cracks and potholes. Blisters....
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
Fotos para matéria optativa de fotografia avançada. O tema do ensaio foi "minha moda é ler" e as fotos foram inspiradas no livro Gossip Girl. Crédito coletivo: Adriana Dieuzeide, Eduardo Bravin, Érica Signorelli, Izaias Buson, Priscilla Cabral, Rafael De Angel e Tiago Coutinho
Virgin and Child with the Saints protecting the city of Cortona.Luca Signorelli was an Italian Renaissance painter who was noted in particular for his ability as a draughtsman and his use of foreshortening. His massive frescoes of the Last Judgment in Orvieto Cathedral are considered his masterpiece.irgin and Saints protecting the city of Cortona.
Shots of the Sodoma/Signorelli frescoes of scenes from the life of St Benedict in the Cloister at Monteoliveto Maggiore (1503 to 1508). They repay viewing at original size.
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.
detail from Luca Signorelli's fresco - Damned taken to Hell and Received by Demons - part of the Last Judgment frescoes (1500-1503) in the S. Brizia Chapel of the Orvieto Cathedral
Montepulciano is a medieval and Renaissance hill town and comune in the Italian province of Siena in southern Tuscany. It sits high on a 605-metre limestone ridge, 70 kilometres southeast of Siena. Montepulciano is a major producer of food and drink. Renowned for its pork, cheese, "pici" pasta, lentils, and honey, it is known worldwide for its wine. Connoisseurs consider its Vino Nobile, which should not be confused with varietal wine merely made from the Montepulciano grape, among Italy's best. The main landmarks include:
•The Palazzo Comunale, designed by Michelozzo in the tradition of the Palazzo della Signoria (Palazzo Vecchio) of Florence.
•Palazzo Tarugi, attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Elder or Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola. It is entirely in travertine, with a portico which was once open to the public.
•The Cathedral of Santa Maria Assunta, or the Duomo of Montepulciano, constructed between 1594 and 1680, includes a masterpiece from the Sienese School, a massive Assumption of the Virgin triptych painted by Taddeo di Bartolo in 1401.
•The church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (late 16th century). It has a simple Mannerist façade with a three-arcade portico. The interior has a single nave, and houses a precious terracotta altar by Andrea della Robbia.
•The Sanctuary of the Madonna di San Biagio is on the road to Chianciano outside the city. It is a typical 16th century Tuscan edifice, designed by Antonio da Sangallo the Elder on a pre-existing Pieve, between 1518 and 1545. It has a circular (central) plan with a large dome over a terrace and a squared tambour. The exterior, with two bell towers, is built in white travertine.
•Baroque church of Santa Lucia has an altarpiece by Luca Signorelli.
•The walls of the city date to around the 14th century.