Reggifestone (“reh-gee-feh-STONE-ay”) and reggistemma ornamentation traced back to Etruscan pottery depicted these figures holding garlands. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name these chubby, winged baby boys that appear in Renaissance paintings and are often conflated with depictions of Cupid.
ANSWER: putti [or putto; or amorini; or amorino; prompt on angels; prompt on cherubs]
[10h] An early Renaissance sculpture with putti was one of these artworks by Jacopo della Quercia that depicts Ilaria del Carretto. An Etruscan example of these artworks in terracotta depicts two spouses reclining on a couch.
ANSWER: sarcophagus [or sarcophagi; accept the Sarcophagus of the Spouses; prompt on coffins; prompt on caskets]
[10e] This Renaissance sculptor referred to putti as “spiritelli” in works like the Cavalcanti Annunciation. This sculptor’s bronze David was the first freestanding male nude since antiquity.
ANSWER: Donatello [or Donato di Niccolò di Betto Bardi]
<Ganon Evans, Fine Arts - Sculpture> ~20389~ <Editor: Chandler West>