Category:Capitals in the Doge's Palace (Venice) - 03

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Putti

This capital has been copied on the Renaissance side of the palace, only with such changes in the ideal of the children as the workman thought expedient and natural. It is highly interesting to compare the child of the fourteenth with the child of the fifteenth century. The early heads are full of youthful life, playful, humane, affectionate, beaming with sensation and vivacity, but with much manliness and firmness, also, not a little cunning, and some cruelty perhaps, beneath all; the features small and hard, and the eyes keen. There is the making of rough and great men in them. But the children of the fifteenth century are dull smooth-faced dunces, without a single meaning line in the fatness oftheir stolid cheeks; and, although, in the vulgar sense, as handsome as the other children are ugly, capable of becoming nothing but perfumed coxcombs. Ruskin Part 3/4 Fourth Capital

original, 1342-1438, partially or completely destroyed sides b, c, d, f, g were reconstructed 1888; motif for Capital 34 in the 15th-century Zanotto