Madonna of Bruges
0 sources
Madonna of Bruges
Summary
Madonna of Bruges is a statue[1]. It ranks in the top 1% of statue entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,978 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Madonna of Bruges is the creator of Michelangelo[3].
- Madonna of Bruges is located in Bruges[4].
- Madonna of Bruges is in the country of Belgium[5].
- Madonna of Bruges's instance of is recorded as statue[6].
- Madonna of Bruges's instance of is recorded as sculpture[7].
- Madonna of Bruges is owned by Alessandro Moscheroni[8].
- Madonna of Bruges is owned by Giovanni Moscheroni[9].
- Madonna of Bruges is associated with the High Renaissance movement[10].
- Madonna of Bruges is associated with the Renaissance movement[11].
- Madonna of Bruges's genre is religious art[12].
- Madonna of Bruges's depicts is recorded as woman[13].
- Madonna of Bruges's depicts is recorded as Christ Child[14].
- Madonna of Bruges's depicts is recorded as boy[15].
- Madonna of Bruges's depicts is recorded as Mary[16].
- Madonna of Bruges's depicts is recorded as mother[17].
- Madonna of Bruges is made of marble[18].
- Madonna of Bruges's collection is recorded as Church of Our Lady[19].
- The location of Madonna of Bruges was Church of Our Lady[20].
- Madonna of Bruges is part of list of masterpieces of Flanders[21].
- Madonna of Bruges's Commons category is recorded as Brugge Madonna by Michelangelo Buonarroti[22].
- Madonna of Bruges's catalog code is recorded as S11[23].
- 1501 marks the founding of Madonna of Bruges[24].
- 1503 marks the founding of Madonna of Bruges[25].
- Madonna of Bruges's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 51.20472222, 'lon': 3.22444444}[26].
- Madonna of Bruges's main subject is Madonna and Child[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Madonna of Bruges is the creator of Michelangelo[3].
Publication
Madonna of Bruges's genre is religious art[12]. It is part of list of masterpieces of Flanders[21].
Subject and Themes
Madonna of Bruges's main subject is Madonna and Child[27]. Movements include High Renaissance[10] and Renaissance[11].
Material and Period
Madonna of Bruges is made of marble[18]. The location of it was Church of Our Lady[20].
Why It Matters
Madonna of Bruges ranks in the top 1% of statue entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,978 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]