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David and Goliath (Daniele da Volterra)
Double-sided painting by Daniele da Volterra From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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David and Goliath or David Killing Goliath is a double-sided oil on slate painting by Italian mannerist painter Daniele da Volterra, created c. 1555. It is held in the Louvre, in Paris. Both sides show the same scene.


History
A commission from Italian author Giovanni Della Casa, Archbishop of Benevento, it uses the composition from a drawing by Michelangelo, Volterra's friend and teacher.[1] It shows Volterra engaging with the contemporaneous debate on whether painting or sculpture was the superior art form; being double-sided allowed the work to compete with sculpture. He produced a clay maquette for the work and chose a very large and flat piece of slate. The slate broke during the process of painting, and was repaired with two barely-visible tenons.[citation needed]
The work belonged to Annibale Rucellai after the death of Giovanni Della Casa, and was offered nearly two centuries later to Louis XIV on 31 July 1715 as a Michelangelo.[2] It was restored at the Louvre in 2007, repairing rain damage from a storm which broke the glass ceiling at the Château de Fontainebleau.[citation needed]
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References
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