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  2. Vestal Virgin Tuccia (Corradini sculpture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vestal_Virgin_Tuccia...

    The Vestal Virgin Tuccia (Italian: La Vestale Tuccia) or Veiled Woman (Italian: La Velata) is a marble sculpture created in 1743 by Antonio Corradini, a Venetian Rococo sculptor known for his illusory depictions of female allegorical figures covered with veils that reveal the fine details of the forms beneath.

  3. Italian Renaissance sculpture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Renaissance_sculpture

    Even compared to painters, recorded women sculptors are vanishingly rare, [119] though probably many are unrecorded, especially modellers in wax. Properzia de' Rossi from Bologna (c. 1490–1530), "Renaissance Italy's only woman sculptor in marble", was regarded as a prodigy for being female, and received a biography in Vasari Lives.

  4. Veiled Rebecca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veiled_Rebecca

    The statue was described in a 19th-century English art journal: "Benzoni, the fashionable Roman sculptor, whose studio has been visited by a number of crowned heads, exhibits in his suite of showrooms, several replicas in different sizes of his Diana, his veiled Rebecca before her meeting with Isaac, the 'Four Seasons', etc." [8]

  5. The Veiled Nun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Veiled_Nun

    The Veiled Nun is a marble bust depicting a female figure, sculpted by an unidentified Italian workshop c. 1863. Despite its name, the woman depicted is not a nun.. The bust was popular with visitors to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., from 1874 until the museum closed in 2014.

  6. Teresa de Francisci - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teresa_de_Francisci

    De Francisci was born Maria "Mary" Teresa Cafarelli in Laurenzana a town south of Naples, Italy to Donatantonio "Donato" and Rosagnese "Rosa" Emma. [2] When she was four years old, she and her mother emigrated to the United States. [2] She was raised in Clinton, Massachusetts, graduating from Clinton High School in 1918.

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  8. Category:Sculptures of women in Italy - Wikipedia

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