Michelangelo Buonarotti, almost certainly the most famous artist produced by Western civilization and arguably the greatest, is universally viewed as the supreme Renaissance artist (see RENAISSANCE ART AND ARCHITECTURE.) He created monumental works of painting, sculpture, and architecture and left an additional legacy of numerous letters and poems. Through this vast and multifaceted body of artistic achievement, Michelangelo made an indelible imprint on the Western imagination.
A member of an old and distinguished Florentine family, Michelangelo was born near Arezzo, Italy, on Mar. 6, 1475, and he died on Feb. 18, 1564, in Rome--a record of longevity that was as unusual as his precocity as an artist. Like his compatriot DONATELLO, Michelangelo to the end of his life saw himself primarily as a sculptor, once avowing that he drank in with his wet-nurse's milk the love of the stonecutter's tools. Always a Florentine patriot, even after he had expanded his art into a universal language, he exemplified the character of his native city: a passionate, proud, and independent man, he saw art as a sacred calling through which the dignity of human beings should be enhanced and celebrated. His lifelong fascination with the sublime form of the human body arose from this thoroughly Florentine sensitivity to the inherent worth and nobility of individuals.
The Early Florentine Years
Michelangelo's Florentine education hinged on three salient attitudes
that dramatically shaped his own outlook. From the age of 13 he received
a firm grounding in the traditional techniques and practices of painting
and sculpture under the tutelage of the painter Domenico GHIRLANDAIO and
the sculptor Bertoldo di Giovanni (c.1420-91). While still in his
adolescence, he was given equally extensive exposure to the art and thought
of the ancient world as a privileged protege of Lorenzo de'Medici, in whose
palace he encountered a celebrated collection of classical works of art
and conversed with the leading humanist poets and philosophers of the day,
notably Marsilio FICINO and Angelo Poliziano (see POLITIAN). After
absorbing the humanist and classically oriented doctrines of NEOPLATONISM
espoused by Poliziano and Ficino, Michelangelo found his belief in rationalistic
humanism tempered by the fiery sermons of the Dominican monk Girolamo Savonarola,
whose fundamentalist attacks on pagan culture and corrupt church practices
struck a responsive chord in the deeply religious young artist. These
early experiences gave Michelangelo a clear sense of the development of
Tuscan art from Giotto de Bondone through Masaccio to Donatello, the relationship
of that tradition to classical art and thought, and the need to come to
grips with the seemingly paradoxical moral and aesthetic views of classical
rationalism and Christian faith. His entire artistic output reflects
a subtle and complex commingling of these disparate attitudes. A
dichotomy is also reflected in his political views. Despite his close
association with the Medici family, his independence of mind led him to
harbor republican sentiments, which took active form in his defense of
the Florentine Republic in 1530.
The impact of Michelangelo's education and the scope of his artistic
potential are lucidly illuminated in his first relief, the Madonna of the
Stairs (1489-92; Casa Buonarroti, Florence), executed while the artist
was still less than 20 years of age. The subject of the seated Mother
nursing the Infant Christ was a traditional one, and the schiacciato (flattened
relief) style directly recalls Donatello's technique, which the young artist
here emulated. Yet the depiction of the Child's muscular right arm
extended behind him, the compression of the space, and the mood of sadness
that permeates the piece convey a compositional and psychological tension
that mark much of Michelangelo's later work. The relief remained
unfinished in detail--another hallmark of the artist's more mature production.
Michelangelo's first response to the majesty of classical Roman art
is found in his larger-than-life statue of Bacchus the god of wine (1496-97;
Bargello, Florence). In this, his first mature masterpiece, Michelangelo
amplified the classical ideal of beauty in a sensual and compositionally
complex rendering of the human form that echoes Donatello's bronze David
(c.1440-42; Bargello, Florence).
Michelangelo was above all a carver in marble whose ability to extract
animate form from a block of stone remains unsurpassed. Two of his most
famous statues, carved while he was in his twenties, movingly attest to
his capabilities. The Pieta (1498-1500; Saint Peter's Basilica,
Rome) epitomizes a grace and finish that are unmatched even in his later
work. The suppleness of Christ's naturalistically modeled torso is
emphasized by the Virgin's flowing drapery, by the serene features of the
two youthful faces, and by the large pyramidal composition that rises to
a natural apex at the head of the Mother of God.
The sweet tenderness of the Pieta gave way to power and monumentality
in the marble DAVID (1501-04; Accademia, Florence), a colossal (4.34-m/14.24-ft)
evocation of athletic prowess and dynamic action. This marble giant
was carved in Florence as a symbol of the proud independence of the Florentine
republic, whose existence was being threatened by more powerful states.
Depicted just before his historic battle with Goliath, David reveals a
psychologically charged state of mind that is reflected in the contrapposto
of his pose. In this heroic work Michelangelo successfully fused
classical inspiration with Florentine humanism and enhanced this fusion
through his own depiction of the male nude.
Julius II and the Sistine Ceiling
The remainder of Michelangelo's career was largely controlled by his
relationship with the papacy, and from 1505 to 1516 the Vatican became
the focal point of his artistic endeavors. Initially called to Rome to
sculpt an enormous tomb for Pope JULIUS II, Michelangelo completed only
a fraction of the proposed sculptural program, including the magnificent
Moses (c.1515; San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome) and the fascinating nude
studies known as the Dying Slave and the Rebellious Slave (both c.1510-13;
Louvre, Paris). A major reason for his inability to finish Julius's
tomb was the immense project he undertook (1508-12) to execute on the ceiling
of the SISTINE CHAPEL, a pictorial cycle devoted to the biblical history
of humanity.
Michelangelo's organization of the Sistine ceiling frescoes represents
perhaps the most complex composition in Western art. The space contains
an intricate illusionistic architectural structure that serves as a frame
for the disposition of the sculpturelike forms. Of the nine central
narrative scenes illustrating events from the creation of the universe
as told in Genesis, the most sublime scene is the Creation of Adam, in
which Michelangelo's new vision of human beauty, first articulated in the
David, attains pictorial form. In the four years that it took to
complete the ceiling, Michelangelo realized the full potential of the High
Renaissance style; in the process, he changed the artistic vision
of another great High Renaissance master, RAPHAEL, and altered the course
of Western art.
Disillusion and Maturity
The supreme statements of the potential nobility of human beings expressed
in the David and the Sistine ceiling frescoes gave way after 1520 to more
complex, agitated, and ominous artistic creations. To a profoundly
religious and humanistic Michelangelo the jolting breakup of the Roman
church after 1517, the terrible sack of Rome by the troops of Holy Roman
Emperor Charles V in 1527, and the final crushing of the Florentine Republic
in 1530 came as disillusioning blows. A radical change in the artist's
outlook is apparent in the masterwork of his middle age, the architectural
and sculptural program of the MEDICI CHAPEL in Florence (1519-34).
The overall architectural scheme of the chapel owes a great debt to Filippo
BRUNELLESCHI's nearby Old Sacristy, but the overwhelming effect of Michelangelo's
squeezed niches, crowded windows, and nonsupporting members is as subtle
and disconcerting as the earlier design is clear and rationalistic. The
statues atop the tombs of Lorenzo and Giuliano de'Medici retain the human
dignity inherent in all of Michelangelo's works, but they strike a new
note of sorrow and poignancy. In the intense spirituality of its
overall design and the disturbing power of forms such as the figure of
Dawn on one of the tombs, the Medici Chapel signals a dramatic shift in
Michelangelo's outlook and style, which hereafter takes on the highly artificial
ideals of beauty that played a key role in the development of MANNERISM.
The Final Years
Michelangelo's seemingly inexhaustible powers of artistic invention
made it possible for him in his final three decades to create an even more
personal style. This last phase of his artistic career, spent almost
entirely in Rome, is characterized by a militant and all-encompassing religious
outlook and a relative subordination of sculptural to pictorial and architectural
efforts. In his last frescoes, the Last Judgment (1536-41;
Sistine Chapel, Vatican), the Conversion of St. Paul (1542-45; Pauline
Chapel, Vatican), and the Crucifixion of Peter (1545-50; Pauline
Chapel, Vatican), he replaced the rational compositional unity and beauty
of the Sistine ceiling frescoes with a visionary world in which the compression
of the figures and the violence of their actions take place in a supremely
spiritual world. His human forms are as powerfully modeled as ever,
but they are now contorted in physical agonies that imply the necessity
of human suffering for the salvation of human souls.
Perhaps Michelangelo's most interesting works of this period are the
architectural commissions he executed in Rome in the last years of his
life. His completion of Antonio da Sangallo's FARNESE PALACE (1517-50)
and his design for the Campidoglio, the plaza and its rebuilt classical
structures atop the Capitoline Hill (begun 1538), both display an idiosyncratic
reordering of the Renaissance architectural vocabulary around outsize and
overwhelmingly powerful elements--the huge cornice of the Farnese and the
gigantic, two-story Corinthian order of the Palazzo dei Conservatori on
the Capitoline. This projection of awesome power also marks Michangelo's
completion and reinterpretation of Donato BRAMANTE'S plan for SAINT PETER'S
BASILICA. Restoring Bramante's Greek-cross plan for the church, Michelangelo
went on to design a powerful exterior unified by a colossal double Corinthian
order and the magnificent ribbed dome that crowns the structure.
In his very last years the aging artist returned to his first love,
sculpture, executing the Pieta, or Deposition (c.1550; Cathedral, Florence)
that he intended to have placed on his own tomb. The omnipresent
power of death is revealed in this marble, unfinished and partially mutilated
by Michelangelo in a fit of depression. The aged and resigned features
of the figure of Nicodemus supporting the dead Christ constitute a self-portrait--the
picture of an old and tired believer who willingly accepts the inevitability
of his own death and the possibility of his soul's salvation as he contemplates
the features of the dead Christ. In this, his most intimate statue,
Michelangelo manifests his deeply moral philosophy, his poetic expression,
and the universality of his imagery; he identifies the divine source
of that spark of creativity that sculpted him into one of the greatest
of all artistic geniuses.