follower of Moderno (Galeazzo Mondella) Pietà ca. 1508-1513 bronze relief Detroit Institute of Arts |
Michelangelo Buonarroti Palestrina Pietà ca. 1550-60 marble Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence |
Paolo Farinati Dead Christ with Cherubs ca. 1570 drawing Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna |
Pedro de Campaña (Pieter de Kempener) Pietà ca. 1550-60 oil on panel Bonnefantenmuseum, Maastricht |
Nicolò dell'Abate Pietà ca. 1540-50 drawing Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna |
Domenico Panetti The Lamentation ca. 1505 oil on panel Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin |
Hans Leinberger The Lamentation ca. 1516 pearwood relief Bode Museum, Berlin |
Anonymous Ferrarese Artist The Lamentation 1527 oil on panel Gallerie Estense, Modena |
Maarten van Heemskerck The Lamentation ca. 1538-42 oil on panel Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Correggio (Antonio Allegri) The Lamentation ca. 1524 oil on canvas Galleria Nazionale di Parma |
Joos van Cleve Triptych with the Lamentation 1524 tempera and oil on panel Städel Museum, Frankfurt |
Bartolomeo da Brescia The Lamentation 1565 engraving Hamburger Kunsthalle |
Andrea Solario Dead Christ supported by the Virgin ca. 1510 oil on panel Yale University Art Gallery |
Anonymous Italian Artist Dead Christ supported by the Virgin and St John the Evangelist 16th century drawing Morgan Library, New York |
Battista Franco (il Semolei) Dead Christ ca. 1540 drawing Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna |
Hans Baldung Dead Christ carried by Cherubs to Heaven 1516 woodcut Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest |
Tamburlaine:
If all the pens that ever poets held,
Had fed the feeling of their maisters thoughts,
And every sweetnes that inspir'd their harts,
Had fed the feeling of their maisters thoughts,
And every sweetnes that inspir'd their harts,
Their minds, and muses on admyred theames:
If all the heavenly Quintessence they still
From their immortall flowers of Poesy,
Wherein as in a myrrour we perceive
The highest reaches of a humaine wit:
If these had made one Poems period
And all combin'd in Beauties worthinesse,
Yet should ther hover in their restlesse heads,
One thought, one grace, one woonder at the least,
Which into words no vertue can digest . . .
And all combin'd in Beauties worthinesse,
Yet should ther hover in their restlesse heads,
One thought, one grace, one woonder at the least,
Which into words no vertue can digest . . .
– Christopher Marlowe, Tamburlaine, The First Part, act V, scene i (1590)