
Baccio Bandinelli.
Pietà.
1554-59. Marble.
over life-size.
SS. Annunziata, Florence
Vasari relates that when Bandinelli heard Michelangelo was carving a Pietà for his tomb,
he immediately began to plan his own, which he finished shortly before he died.
Like Michelangelo's, it includes an idealized self-portrait as Joseph of Arimathea
or Nicodemus and was to be a four-figure group with St Catherine of Siena
and St John the Baptist.
His contemporaries considered his Christ too physical and indecorous.
Strangely proportioned, he rests awkwardly on a block signed by the artist,
which resembles a small altar as well as Michelangelo's blocks.
The Christ may be a portrait of Bandinelli's son.

Lorenzo Lotto.
Pietà.
1508.
Oil on wood. 80 x 80 cm.
Pinacoteca Comunale, Recanati
The Pietà is the crowning section of the Recanati Polyptych.
It represents Joseph of Arythmea, the Madonna,
Mary Magdalene and an angel at the left.

Romanino.
Pietà.
1510.
Oil on panel. 183 x 185 cm.
Gallerie dell'Accademia, Venice

Moretto da Brescia.
Pietà.
1520. Wood.
National Gallery of Art, Washington
In this important early work by Moretto, Christ is mourned by the Virgin Mary,
Saint John the Evangelist, and Mary Magdalen.
By introducing the grandeur and monumental composition of Venetian masters,
particularly Titian, Moretto brought new stature to the local Brescian shool of painting.

Rosso Fiorentino.
Pietà.
1537-40
Oil on wood transferred to canvas.
125 x 159 cm.
Musée du Louvre, Paris

Il Sodoma.
Pietà.
c. 1540.
Oil on canvas.
Galleria Borghese, Rome

Unknown.
Pietà.
1500-20.
Marble.
Parish church, Bayel (Aube)

Unknown.
Pietà.
c. 1550.
Painted wood.
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Huber Wolf.
The Lamentation of Christ.
1524.
Wood. 105 x 86 cm.
Musée du Louvre, Paris

Maerten van Heemskerck.
Lamentation of Christ.
1540-43
Oil on wood. 78,5 x 67,5 cm.
Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest

Jan Sanders van Hemessen.
The Lamentation of Christ
Oil on panel. 228 x 24 cm.
Rockox House, Antwerp
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