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Michelangelo

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Title: Michelangelo


1
Michelangelo
2
Michelangelo Buonarroti
  • Perhaps the greatest influence on western art in
    the last five centuries, Michelangelo was an
    Italian sculptor, architect, painter and poet in
    the period known as the High Renaissance. Along
    with contemporaries Leonardo da Vinci and
    Raphael, he is considered one of the greatest
    masters in the history of European art.

3
Biography
  • Michelangelo was one of the most inspired
    creators in the history of art and, with Leonardo
    da Vinci, the most potent force in the Italian
    High Renaissance. As a sculptor, architect,
    painter, and poet, he exerted a tremendous
    influence on his contemporaries and on subsequent
    Western art in general.

4
  • A Florentinealthough born March 6, 1475, in the
    small village of Caprese near ArezzoMichelangelo
    continued to have a deep attachment to his city,
    its art, and its culture throughout his long
    life. He spent the greater part of his adulthood
    in Rome, employed by the popes
    characteristically, however, he left instructions
    that he be buried in Florence, and his body was
    placed there in a fine monument in the church of
    Santa Croce.

5
David
  • His great works were almost entirely in the
    service of the Catholic Church, and include a
    huge statue of the Biblical hero David (over 14
    feet tall) in Florence, sculpted between 1501 and
    1504

6
  • David Gigantic marble, started in 1501 and
    completed in 1504 Michelangelo began work on the
    colossal figure of David in 1501, and by 1504 the
    sculpture (standing at 4.34m/14 ft 3 in tall) was
    in place outside the Palazzo Vecchio. The choice
    of David was supposed to reflect the power and
    determination of Republican Florence and was
    under constant attack from supporters of the
    usurped Medicis. In the 19th century the statue
    was moved to the Accademia.

7
  • The high point of Michelangelo's early style is
    the gigantic (4.34 m/14.24 ft) marble David
    (Accademia, Florence), which he produced between
    1501 and 1504, after returning to Florence. The
    Old Testament hero is depicted by Michelangelo as
    a lithe nude youth, muscular and alert, looking
    off into the distance as if sizing up the enemy
    Goliath, whom he has not yet encountered. The
    fiery intensity of David's facial expression is
    termed terribilità, a feature characteristic of
    many of Michelangelo's figures and of his own
    personality. David, Michelangelo's most famous
    sculpture, became the symbol of Florence and
    originally was placed in the Piazza della
    Signoria in front of the Palazzo Vecchio, the
    Florentine town hall.

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10
Sculpture
11
Moses
  • Michelangelo made some of his finest sculpture
    for the Julius Tomb, including the Moses (circa
    1515), the central figure in the much reduced
    monument now located in Rome's church of San
    Pietro in Vincoli. The muscular patriarch sits
    alertly in a shallow niche, holding the tablets
    of the Ten Commandments, his long beard entwined
    in his powerful hands. He looks off into the
    distance as if communicating with God.

12
Pieta
  • The marble Pietà (1498-1500), still in its
    original place in Saint Peter's Basilica. One of
    the most famous works of art, the Pietà was
    probably finished before Michelangelo was 25
    years old, and it is the only work he ever
    signed. The youthful Mary is shown seated
    majestically, holding the dead Christ across her
    lap, a theme borrowed from northern European art.
    Instead of revealing extreme grief, Mary is
    restrained, and her expression is one of
    resignation.

13
The Dying Slave
  • The Bound Slave and the Dying Slave (both c.
    1510-13), Musée du Louvre, Paris, demonstrate
    Michelangelo's approach to carving. He conceived
    of the figure as being imprisoned in the block.
    By removing the excess stone, the form was
    released. Here, as is frequently the case with
    his sculpture, Michelangelo left the statues
    unfinished (non-finito), either because he was
    satisfied with them as is, or because he no
    longer planned to use them.

14
The Madonna of the Stairs
15
Bacchus
  • The over-life-size Bacchus (1496-98, Bargello,
    Florence). One of the few works of pagan rather
    than Christian subject matter made by the master,
    it rivaled ancient statuary, the highest mark of
    admiration in Renaissance Rome.

16
Sistine Chapel
  • The ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome
    (commissioned by Pope Julius II), was painted
    between 1508 and 1512.

17
  • Michelangelo was recalled to Rome by Pope Julius
    II in 1505 for two commissions. The most
    important one was for the frescoes of the Sistine
    Chapel ceiling. Working high above the chapel
    floor, lying on his back on scaffolding,
    Michelangelo painted, between 1508 and 1512, some
    of the finest pictorial images of all time. On
    the vault of the papal chapel, he devised an
    intricate system of decoration that included nine
    scenes from the Book of Genesis, beginning with
    God Separating Light from Darkness and including
    the Creation of Adam, the Creation of Eve, the
    Temptation and Fall of Adam and Eve, and the
    Flood. These centrally located narratives are
    surrounded by alternating images of prophets and
    sibyls on marble thrones, by other Old Testament
    subjects, and by the ancestors of Christ.

18
  • In order to prepare for this enormous work,
    Michelangelo drew numerous figure studies and
    cartoons, devising scores of figure types and
    poses. These awesome, mighty images,
    demonstrating Michelangelo's masterly
    understanding of human anatomy and movement,
    changed the course of painting in the West.

19
The Creation Of Man
20
The Creation of the Heavens
21
The Erythraean Sibyl
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The Fall From Grace
23
The Flood
24
The Prophet Zachariah
25
The Last Judgement
  • In Rome, in 1536, Michelangelo was at work on the
    Last Judgment for the alter wall of the Sistine
    Chapel, which he finished in 1541. The largest
    fresco of the Renaissance, it depicts Judgment
    Day. Christ, with a clap of thunder, puts into
    motion the inevitable separation, with the saved
    ascending on the left side of the painting and
    the damned descending on the right into a
    Dantesque hell. As was his custom, Michelangelo
    portrayed all the figures nude, but prudish
    draperies were added by another artist (who was
    dubbed the breeches-maker) a decade later, as
    the cultural climate became more conservative.
    Michelangelo painted his own image in the flayed
    skin of St. Bartholomew.

26
The Last Judgement
27
Doni Tondo
  • The Holy Family with the infant St. John the
    Baptist (the Doni Tondo) c. 1503-05

28
  • Sybille de Cummes ceiling of the Sistine Chapel
    in Vatican City Sibyls were female seers of
    ancient Greece and Rome. They were also known as
    oracles. Like the Jewish prophets of the Old
    Testament, many sibyls had their sayings recorded
    in books. Jewish prophets spoke unbidden, whereas
    sibyls tended to speak only if consulted on
    specific questions. They sometimes answered in
    riddles or rhetorical questions.

29
Sistine Chapel Virtual Tour
  • http//mv.vatican.va/3_EN/pages/x-Pano/CSN/Visit_C
    SN_Main.html

30
  • Dome of St. Peter's Basilica Michelangelo's
    crowning achievement as an architect was his work
    at St. Peter's Basilica, where he was made chief
    architect in 1546. The building was being
    constructed according to Donato Bramante's plan,
    but Michelangelo ultimately became responsible
    for the altar end of the building on the exterior
    and for the final form of its dome.

31
Michelangelo's Achievements
  • During his long lifetime, Michelangelo was an
    intimate of princes and popes, from Lorenzo de'
    Medici to Leo X, Clement VIII, and Pius III, as
    well as cardinals, painters, and poets. Neither
    easy to get along with nor easy to understand, he
    expressed his view of himself and the world even
    more directly in his poetry than in the other
    arts. Much of his verse deals with art and the
    hardships he underwent, or with Neoplatonic
    philosophy and personal relationships.

32
  • The great Renaissance poet Ludovico Ariosto wrote
    succinctly of this famous artist Michael more
    than mortal, divine angel. Indeed, Michelangelo
    was widely awarded the epithetdivine because of
    his extraordinary accomplishments. Two
    generations of Italian painters and sculptors
    were impressed by his treatment of the human
    figure Raphael, Annabale Carracci, Pontormo,
    Rosso Fiorentino, Sebastiano del Piombo, and
    Titian. His dome for St. Peter's became the
    symbol of authority, as well as the model, for
    domes all over the Western world the majority of
    state capitol buildings in the U.S., as well as
    the Capitol in Washington, D.C., are derived from
    it.
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