Michelangelo
(1475-1564), Italian painter, sculptor, architect, and poet whose artistic
accomplishments exerted a tremendous influence on his contemporaries
and on subsequent European art. Michelangelo considered the male nude
to be the foremost subject in art, and he explored its range of movement
and expression in every medium. Even his architecture has a human aspect
to it, in which a door, window, or support may refer to the face or
body, or the position of architectural elements may suggest muscular
tension.
Michelangelo continually sought challenge, whether
physical, artistic, or intellectual. He favored media that required
hard physical labor—marble carving and fresco painting. In painting
figures, he chose poses that were especially difficult to draw. And
he gave his works several layers of meaning, by including multiple references
to mythology, religion, and other subjects. His success in conquering
the difficulties he set for himself is remarkable, but he left many
of his works unfinished, as if he were defeated by his own ambition.
Michelangelo Buonarroti was born in the
small village of Caprese and grew up in Florence. Florence was the artistic
center of the early Renaissance, a period of outstanding artistic innovation
and accomplishment that began in the early 1400s. In many ways the masterpieces
that surrounded Michelangelo were his best teachers—ancient Greek and
Roman statuary, and the paintings, sculpture, and architecture of early
Renaissance masters Masaccio, Lorenzo Ghiberti, Donatello, Jacopo della
Quercia, and Filippo Brunelleschi. As a child he preferred drawing to
his schoolwork, despite his father's stern disapproval.
Eventually his father relented and allowed 13-year
old Michelangelo to be apprenticed to Florentine painter Domenico Ghirlandaio.
Michelangelo's time in Ghirlandaio's workshop was marked with conflict,
and his training there ended after only a year. Although he later denied
that Ghirlandaio had any influence on him, he surely learned the technique
of fresco painting from him, and his early drawings show some evidence
of drawing methods used by Ghirlandaio.
From 1490 to 1492 Michelangelo lived in the house of
Lorenzo de' Medici (known as Lorenzo the Magnificent), then the leading
art patron of Florence. The Medici household was a gathering place for
artists, philosophers, and poets. During this time Michelangelo met
and perhaps studied with Bertoldo di Giovanni, an aging master who had
trained with Donatello, the greatest sculptor of 15th-century Florence.
Other members of the Medici circle inspired in Michelangelo a love of
literature that he would develop in his poetry (a significant, if less-accomplished
art form for him). They also taught him the ideas of Neoplatonism—a
philosophy that regards the body as a trap for a soul that longs to
return to God. Scholars interpret many of Michelangelo's works in terms
of these ideas, in particular, his human figures that appear to break
free from the stone that imprisons them.
Lorenzo de' Medici wished to revive the art of sculpture
in the classical manner of the ancient Greeks and Romans, and he had
a collection of ancient art that Michelangelo doubtless studied. Classical
art provided an inspiration and a standard of excellence that Michelangelo
hoped to surpass. Some of his earliest sculptures imitated classical
works so closely that they were passed off as Roman originals. Later,
Michelangelo was on hand in Rome for the excavation of a massive ancient
sculpture of Laocoön (probably a Roman copy of a Greek original from
the 2nd century BC, Vatican Museums, Vatican City). This powerful grouping
of the Trojan prince Laocoön and his two sons, as they struggle to free
themselves from huge snakes, provided a model of tense and twisting
bodies that Michelangelo used in many of his late works, including the
Last Judgment (1536-1541, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City).
Michelangelo was a very religious man, but he expressed
his personal beliefs most clearly in his late works. His late drawings
are introspective meditations on Christian themes such as the crucifixion,
and in some works he inserted his own image as an onlooker in a religious
scene.
Throughout his career Michelangelo came in contact
with learned and powerful men. His patrons were wealthy businessmen,
civic leaders, and church officials, including popes Julius II, Clement
VII (born Giulio de' Medici, nephew of Lorenzo), and Paul III. Michelangelo
strove to be accepted among his patrons as a gentleman, producing a
large body of poetry and constructing a myth of noble ancestry. At the
same time, he seemed to take pride in the physical work of making art.
For example, he preferred the dirty and exhausting art of marble carving
to that of panel painting, which he saw as something one could do in
fine clothing. This is one of many contradictions in his life, but it
is also an indication of the changing status of the artist—from craftsman
to genius—that Michelangelo himself helped to bring about.
Sistine Ceiling
A major project preventing completion of the tomb of Julius II was a
new commission from Julius himself, to paint the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel in Rome. Between 1508 and 1512 Michelangelo created some of the
most memorable images of all time on the vaulted ceiling of the papal
chapel in the Vatican. His intricate system of decoration tells the
biblical story of Genesis, beginning with God separating light and dark
(above the altar), progressing to the story of Adam and Eve, and concluding
with the story of Noah. Scenes from the biblical stories of David, Judith,
Esther, and Moses are depicted in the corners, while images of prophets,
sibyls (female prophets), and the ancestors of Christ are set in a painted
architectural framework above the windows. Bright, clear colors enliven
and unify the vast surface, and make the details more legible from the
floor of the chapel.
The Creation of Adam from the Sistine Ceiling (1508-1512)
is perhaps Michelangelo's finest fusion of form and meaning. Adam's
pose echoes both the shape of the ground on which he reclines and the
pose of God the Father, thus giving visual form to the biblical description
of Adam as made from the earth in the likeness of God. We see Adam beginning
to come to life, as he reaches listlessly toward the vigorous energy
that the image of God embodies.
Drawings
Throughout his life, Michelangelo produced drawings of all sorts, including
quick pen sketches, composition drawings, careful studies of anatomy,
and architectural plans and elevations. In a special category, however,
are the highly finished presentation drawings, meant to be seen as complete
works of art and given as gifts to his closest friends. Some of these
drawings represent classical myths, but he selected these myths and
sometimes reshaped them to reflect personal meanings or to express Neoplatonic
ideas. Others represent idealized human beings. An example is the Divine
Head (1530?, British Museum, London), a drawing of a female paired with
the male Count of Canossa (original drawing lost). Using short strokes
of chalk that are precisely modulated (varied in tone) and stippling
(dots or flecks), Michelangelo creates an image of perfection. These
are imaginative works, showing the skill of the artist both in the meticulous
rendering of surfaces and in the wildly creative hairstyles or helmets
he gives them.
Influence
Michelangelo's influence on his contemporaries and on later artists
was profound. Mannerism was an art movement based on exaggeration of
aspects of the style of Michelangelo and other artists of the late Renaissance.
The mannerists were particularly drawn to the complex poses and elongated
elegance of some of his figures. Later artists, including Annibale Carracci
and Peter Paul Rubens, emulated the powerful strength of his figures
but combined it with the graceful line of Raphael or the colors used
by Titian, two of Michelangelo's contemporaries. But perhaps Michelangelo's
greatest legacy to later artists is the image of the genius that he
and those around him fashioned. Brooding, isolated, challenging, temperamental—these
are the words that described Michelangelo's character and that we still
use to describe artists seized by an inspiration that seems more than
human.
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