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putto
[ poo-toh; Italian poot-taw ]
noun
- a representation of a cherubic infant, often shown winged.
putto
/ ˈ±èÊŠ³Ùəʊ /
noun
- a representation of a small boy, a cherub or cupid, esp in baroque painting or sculpture See also amoretto
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of putto1
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of putto1
Example Sentences
Then you step back and get the whole painting, the big picture, and it’s a harsh one, a narrative of victimized innocence, but also — even primarily? — of erotic display, detailed in Europa’s flailing limbs; in the bull Jupiter’s avid eyes; and in the figure of a dolphin-riding putto who playfully mimics Europa’s agonized pose.
A little plaster putto Cézanne had in his studio — familiar from one of his greatest fruit-strewn still lifes, in the Courtauld Gallery in London — appears several times here as a lumpy, unwieldy assemblage.
This show includes several other small bronzes by Verrocchio, including the recently conserved “Putto With a Dolphin,†from 1465 or a little later, which was the first Renaissance sculpture made to be beheld from 360 degrees.
In the middle of the set, a pinstriped putto peed into a fountain.
But the gilded figure of a plump, graceful cherub, or putto, nagged at him, and when he finally did buy it, in 2012, it set him off down an art-historical detective trail that made him glad he followed his instincts.
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