Difference between revisions of "Gallant statue"

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki
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==Art details==
 
==Art details==
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===In {{NL|nolink|short}}===
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{{NLArtInfo
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| image = Gallant Statue NL Model.png
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| fake-image = Fake Gallant Statue (New Leaf).png
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|art-name = David
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|author = Michelangelo
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|year = Made around 1504
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|art-style = Marble
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| art-type = Statue
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<!-- | description = --->
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| buy-price = 3,920
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| sell-price = 490
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| availability = Redd's Gallery
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| authenticity = In the forgery, David has a cloth hanging around his right shoulder. If there's no cloth on David's right shoulder, it is genuine
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| art-width = 1.0
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| art-length = 1.0
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}}
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{{Note list}}
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===In {{NH|nolink|short}}===
 
===In {{NH|nolink|short}}===
 
{{NHArtInfo
 
{{NHArtInfo

Revision as of 12:55, January 21, 2021

Gallant Statue NH Icon.png
Real-world counterpart
David
Year Unknown
Artist Michelangelo
Main appearances

Name in other languages
 りりしいちょうこく
 英挺的雕塑
 Statue majestueuse
 Estatua majestuosa
 Statua maestosa
 Доблестная статуя
 늠름한 조각
 英挺的雕塑
 Statue majestueuse
 Estatua majestuosa
 Galantstatue
 Verheven standbeeld


The Gallant Statue is a statue in the Animal Crossing series introduced in Animal Crossing: New Leaf. It is based on Michelangelo's David. The Gallant Statue is the only statue to make an appearance in Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp as of May 2020.

Art details

In New Leaf


Real artwork

Gallant statue

Forgery

Gallant statue


David
Artist: Michelangelo
Made around 1504
Marble


Museum description Unknown
Buy price  3,920 Bells
Sell price  490 Bells [nb 1]
Obtain from  Redd's Gallery
Authenticity In the forgery, David has a cloth hanging around his right shoulder. If there's no cloth on David's right shoulder, it is genuine
Furniture size 1.0 x 1.0
  1. Cannot be sold if it is a forgery. Will be charged  100 Bells from Re-Tail.

In New Horizons


Real artwork

Gallant statue

Forgery

Gallant statue


David
Michelangelo, circa 1504
Marble


Museum description Young David glares at his enemies, sling slung over his shoulder. It took Michelangelo more than three years to sculpt this piece. Close inspection shows heart- shaped eyes, but that's probably meant to depict light hitting them. Hearts didn't have the lovey-dovey symbolism back then that they do today.
Buy price  4,980 Bells
Sell price  1,245 Bells[nb 1]
Obtain from  Jolly Redd's Treasure Trawler
Authenticity In the forgery, David is shown holding a book between his arm and waist. If David does not have a book, it is genuine.
Furniture size 2.0 x 2.0
  1. Cannot be sold if it is a forgery.

Authenticity

In New Leaf, if there is cloth hanging down his right shoulder, it is fake. If his right shoulder is bare, it is genuine.

In New Horizons, the forged statue holds a tome between his arm and waist, while the genuine statue does not.

Gallery

Real-world information

David

Sculpted by the acclaimed Italian artist Michaelangelo between 1501 and 1504 — during the Renaissance — David is a seventeen foot tall marble statue of David, a Biblical hero and a favored subject of art in Florence. David is depicted standing nude, posed in the contrapposto posture.

Originally commissioned as one of a series of statues of prophets to be positioned along the roofline of the east end of Florence Cathedral, the statue was instead placed in a public square outside the Palazzo della Signoria, the seat of civic government in Florence, where it was unveiled on 8 September 1504.


Copyright Symbol.svg
This image is an illustration of a scene or object from a video game.
The copyright for it is most likely owned by either the publisher/producer and/or artist(s) producing the work in question. It is believed that the use of web-resolution images of artwork for commentary on the scene or object in question qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. See Wikipedia:Fair use for more information.
Copyright Symbol.svg
This image is an illustration of a scene or object from a video game.
The copyright for it is most likely owned by either the publisher/producer and/or artist(s) producing the work in question. It is believed that the use of web-resolution images of artwork for commentary on the scene or object in question qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law. See Wikipedia:Fair use for more information.