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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69303 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69303)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Michelangelo, by Edward C. Strutt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Michelangelo
-
-Author: Edward C. Strutt
-
-Release Date: November 6, 2022 [eBook #69303]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MICHELANGELO ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: THE DAVID.]
-
-
-
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters
-
-
-
- MICHELANGELO
-
- BY
-
- EDWARD C. STRUTT
-
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE BELL & SONS
- 1908
-
-
-
-
- First Published, January, 1904.
- Reprinted, 1908.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-SOME BOOKS ABOUT MICHELANGELO
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-CHRONOLOGY OF THE ARTIST'S LIFE
-
-LIFE OF MICHELANGELO
-
-THE ART OF MICHELANGELO
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-LIST OF THE ARTIST'S CHIEF WORKS IN PUBLIC GALLERIES
-
-
-
-
-SOME BOOKS ABOUT MICHELANGELO
-
-
-"Carte Michelangiolescheinedite." Milano, 1865.
-
-"Vita di Michelangelo Buonarroti," by A. Condivi. Pisa, 1823.
-
-"Michelangelo," by H. Knackfuss. Berlin, 1895.
-
-"Michel Ange," by E. Ollivier. Paris, 1892.
-
-"The Lives and Works of Michelangelo and Raphael," by Quatremere de
-Quincy.
-
-"Michelangelo," by L. von Scheffler. 1892.
-
-"Michelangiolo in Rom, 1508-1512," by A. Springer. Leipzig, 1875.
-
-"Life and works of M. A. Buonarroti," by Charles Heath Wilson.
-London, 1876.
-
-"Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti," by John Addington Symonds.
-London, 1893.
-
-"Michelangelo Buonarroti," by Sir Charles Holroyd. London, 1903.
-
-"An account of the drawings by Raphael and Michelangelo in the
-University Galleries of Oxford," by Sir J. C. Robinson.
-
-"Michael Angelo," by Lord Ronald Sutherland Gower. London, 1903.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-THE DAVID _Accademia, Florence, Frontispiece_
-
-PORTRAIT OF MICHELANGELO _Uffizi Gallery, Florence_
-
-THE CREATION OF MAN _Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome_
-
-TOMB OF LORENZO DE' MEDICI _New Sacristy, San Lorenzo, Florence_
-
-CENTRAL GROUP OF THE LAST JUDGMENT _Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome_
-
-THE MADONNA DELLA PIETÀ _St. Peter's, Rome_
-
-THE HOLY FAMILY _Uffizi Gallery, Florence_
-
-THE MOSES _San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome_
-
-
-
-
-CHRONOLOGY OF MICHELANGELO'S LIFE
-
-
-1475. Born at Caprese.
-
-1488. Is apprenticed to Domenico Ghirlandajo.
-
-1489-92. Studies sculpture under the patronage of Lorenzo il
-Magnifico.
-
-1504. Enters into competition with Leonardo da Vinci.
-
-1505. Goes to Rome at the invitation of Pope Julius II.
-
-1508. Begins painting ceiling of Sistine Chapel.
-
-1512. Completes it.
-
-1521. Commences Medicean Tombs in San Lorenzo.
-
-1529. Fortifies Florence against Charles V.
-
-1535-41. Paints Last Judgment.
-
-1547. Begins building Cupola of St. Peter's.
-
-1564. Dies in Rome.
-
-
-
-
-THE LIFE OF MICHELANGELO
-
-In the quaintly written diary of Messer Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, a
-well-to-do Florentine citizen, the following entry, dated March 6th,
-1475, may still be found: "To-day there was born unto me a male
-child, whom I have named Michelagnolo.[1] He saw the light at
-Caprese, whereof I am Podestà, on Monday morning, 6th March, between
-four and five o'clock, and on the 8th of the same month he was
-baptized in the church of San Giovanni." Messer Lodovico had been
-appointed _Podestà_, or Governor, of Chiusi and Caprese in the
-Casentino by Lorenzo de Medici only a few months before penning this
-memorandum, so that, by a strange caprice of fate, it was here, in
-the little town overshadowed by the rugged Sasso della Verna,
-hallowed by the ecstatic visions of St. Francis of Assisi, and not in
-Florence, in the Athens of the Italian Renaissance, where resurrected
-Paganism ran riot and triumphed, that the longest and most glorious
-career in the history of art and of human endeavour began.
-
-
-[1] This is the archaic form of _angelo_. The name is also sometimes
-spelt _Michelangiolo_, but I have thought it advisable to adopt the
-modern and more generally accepted _Michelangelo_.
-
-
-Vasari and Condivi, Michelangelo's pupils and enthusiastic
-biographers, maintain that the Buonarroti family was closely related
-to the great house of the Counts of Canossa, a conviction fully
-shared, curiously enough, by the artist himself, who rather prided
-himself on his aristocratic connection. But recent genealogical
-researches have proved beyond all doubt that, although of gentle
-birth (both his father and his mother, Madonna Francesca di Miniato
-Del Sera, coming of ancient Florentine stock), Michelangelo could not
-in reality lay claim to even distant ties of kinship with the Canossa
-family.
-
-On the expiration of his term of office as Podestà of Caprese, which
-extended little over a year, Messer Lodovico returned with his family
-to Settignano, the picturesque little village built on a vine-clad
-slope overlooking Florence, where, in an old-fashioned mansion
-nestling among olive trees and surrounded by a well-cultivated
-_podere_, many generations of the Buonarroti had lived and died.
-Before leaving Caprese, however, the proud father had the child's
-horoscope cast, and greatly did he rejoice when the astrologer
-announced that a singularly lucky combination of the planets had
-presided over the birth of his boy, who was destined "to perform
-wonders with his mind and with his hands," a prophecy which was amply
-fulfilled.
-
-
-
-FIRST FLORENTINE PERIOD
-
-The removal of the Buonarroti family to Settignano, the little
-village almost exclusively inhabited by stonemasons and workers in
-marble, exercised a most decisive influence on the child's future
-career. Indeed, Michelangelo himself used to say half jestingly,
-that as he had been given out to nurse to a stonemason's wife, the
-mania for sculpture must have entered his blood together with the
-milk which he had sucked as a babe. A mallet and a chisel and bits
-of marble were the only toys that the infant Michelangelo cared for,
-and it is recorded of him that when he grew up to be a sturdy boy of
-ten he could use his tools almost as skilfully as his foster-father
-himself. He soon became more ambitious, and would pass whole hours
-with chalk and charcoal, trying to copy the marble figures and
-ornaments plentifully strewn about.
-
-For it was a busy time at Settignano, whose hundreds of stone-carvers
-were hardly able to cope with the numerous commissions which poured
-in upon them from the merchant princes of Florence, anxious to rival
-Lorenzo the Magnificent in the building and decoration of splendid
-palaces. A spirited drawing of a faun by Michelangelo's boyish hand
-may still be seen on a wall of the Buonarroti Villa.
-
-Messer Lodovico did everything in his power to discourage these
-marked artistic tendencies, and in order the better to uproot what he
-regarded as a worthless inclination, he sent the boy to a
-grammar-school in Florence, away from the dangerous _milieu_ of
-Settignano, with its unceasing din of hammer and chisel on
-reverberating marble, which was sweet music to Michelangelo's ear.
-But although Maestro Francesco da Urbino, to whose care Messer
-Lodovico had entrusted his son, frequently had recourse to the most
-persuasive and forcible arguments, they were entirely lost on young
-Michelangelo, who had instinctively drifted into the company of the
-garzoni and pupils of leading Florentine artists, and sadly neglected
-his books in order to devote himself with growing enthusiasm to the
-study of art.
-
-Amongst his new friends was Francesco Granacci, a pupil of Domenico
-Ghirlandajo, who often lent him drawings to copy, and took him to his
-master's _bottega_ whenever any work was going forward from which he
-might learn. "So powerfully," says Condivi, "did these sights move
-Michelangelo, that he altogether abandoned letters; so that his
-father, who held art in contempt, often beat him severely for it."
-But it soon became apparent that blows and persuasion were equally
-unavailing, and Messer Lodovico finally gave up the hopeless
-struggle, apprenticing his thirteen-year-old son on April 1st, 1488,
-to Domenico and David Ghirlandajo, reputed the best painters of the
-time in Florence. Although a mere child, Michelangelo was evidently
-already able to make himself useful in the studio, for instead of
-paying a certain sum for his apprenticeship, as was usually the case,
-it was stipulated that he should receive twenty-four florins, about
-£8 12_s._, during the three years of its duration.
-
-Michelangelo's first picture was a strikingly faithful copy of Martin
-Schongauer's famous _Temptation of St. Antony_, which he painted with
-a realistic force considered wonderful for a child of his age. A
-number of anecdotes illustrative of the precocity of the boy's
-genius, are related by Condivi and by Vasari. "Michelangelo," says
-the latter, "grew in power and character so rapidly that Domenico was
-astonished seeing him do things quite extraordinary in a youth, for
-he not only surpassed the other students, but often equalled the work
-done by his master. It happened that Domenico was working in the
-great chapel of Santa Maria Novella, and one day when he was out
-Michelangelo set himself to draw from nature the scaffolding, the
-tables with all the materials of the art, and some of the young men
-at work. Presently Domenico returned, and saw Michelangelo's
-drawing. He was astonished, saying 'this boy knows more than I do;'
-and he was stupefied by this style and new realism; 'a gift from
-heaven to a child of such tender years.'"
-
-Michelangelo derived very little advantage from his apprenticeship to
-Domenico Ghirlandajo, who was actually jealous of his pupil and gave
-him little or no assistance in his studies. He may have picked up
-some practical knowledge, however, transferring cartoons for his
-master in the church of Santa Maria Novella, painting draperies and
-ornaments, mixing colours for fresco painting, and generally
-fulfilling the rather menial duties which fell to the lot of an
-artist's apprentice in those days. The boy had no fixed plan or
-method of study, but devoted himself principally to drawing, in which
-he soon acquired a boldness and security of line never attained by
-his master, whose faulty cartoons Michelangelo often had the courage
-to correct.
-
-It was in the gardens of the Medici at San Marco, where Lorenzo the
-Magnificent had collected many antique statues and decorative
-sculptures, that Michelangelo finally discovered his real artistic
-vocation, and here he would spend many hours every day, assimilating
-the Hellenic spirit which emanated from the masterpieces before him.
-
-Lorenzo's principal object in establishing a museum of antique
-sculpture at San Marco had been to raise Florentine sculpture from
-the state of comparative neglect into which it had fallen since the
-death of Donatello. He therefore appointed one Bertoldo, who had
-been foreman of Donatello's workshop, keeper of the collection, with
-a special commission to encourage and instruct the young men who
-studied there. But there was evidently a great lack of students, for
-Lorenzo had recourse to Domenico Ghirlandajo, requesting him to
-select from his pupils those he considered the most promising, and
-send them to work in the garden of San Marco. Domenico, nothing loth
-to get rid of his two most ambitious apprentices, selected Francesco
-Granacci and Michelangelo, and it was thus that the latter came under
-the influence of Donatello's school. Of Bertoldo, who must be
-considered Michelangelo's first instructor in the art of sculpture,
-and who doubtless had a great share in shaping his genius, very
-little is known beyond Vasari's statement that "although he was old
-and could not work, he was none the less an able and highly reputed
-artist." The magnificent pulpits of San Lorenzo, begun by Donatello
-and completed by Bertoldo, amply suffice to confirm Vasari's
-eulogistic estimate.
-
-Under such a master Michelangelo made rapid progress, and by his
-first attempt at sculpture, a mask of a grinning Faun, attracted the
-attention of Lorenzo the Magnificent, who took the keenest interest
-in the art school which he had founded. So struck was Lorenzo with
-the boy's genius, that he prevailed upon Messer Lodovico, not without
-the greatest difficulty, to entrust the talented young sculptor to
-his care. Vasari tells us that "he gave Michelangelo a good room in
-his own house with all that he needed, treating him like a son, with
-a seat at his table, which was frequented every day by noblemen and
-men of great importance."
-
-[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF MICHELANGELO.]
-
-Michelangelo's daily companions at this hospitable board were such
-men as Pico della Mirandola, surnamed "the prince of wisdom,"
-Marsilio Ficino, the expounder of Plato, and the poets Luigi Pulci
-and Angelo Poliziano. It was the latter who suggested the subject of
-Michelangelo's first important work, a bas-relief, now in the Casa
-Buonarroti, representing the _Battle of the Centaurs and Lapithae_.
-It is a singularly powerful composition, conceived and carried out
-with a freedom and originality little short of miraculous in a boy of
-fifteen. The struggling groups of combatants, instinct with life and
-energy, the masterful treatment of anatomical problems, and the
-already profound knowledge of the human frame, reveal the future
-author of the _Last Judgment_.
-
-Michelangelo himself, when at the height of his artistic greatness,
-used to say that he had never quite fulfilled the splendid promise
-contained in this youthful work of his. Apart from its intrinsic
-merit, this bas-relief is interesting as illustrating Michelangelo's
-complete independence from the school and methods of Donatello. His
-bold and original genius had sought inspiration directly from the
-antique, and the _Battle of the Centaurs and Lapithae_ might easily
-be taken for a fragment from some Roman sarcophagus. In view of
-these very pronounced characteristics, it is difficult to understand
-why another bas-relief, also in the Casa Buonarroti, representing a
-seated Madonna with the Infant Jesus, and chiefly notable for its
-almost servile imitation of Donatello's manner, should be ascribed by
-most critics to this same period. Indeed, the execution and design
-of this _Madonna and Child_ are so inferior as to render it a work of
-extremely doubtful authenticity.
-
-Although he applied himself principally to the study of sculpture,
-Michelangelo continued to devote many hours every day to drawing,
-and, like most young artists of his age, he drew and studied
-assiduously in the Brancacci Chapel of the Church of the Carmine,
-containing the famous frescoes of Masaccio and his followers.
-Conscious of his own superiority, Michelangelo was, it appears, in
-the habit of frankly criticizing the work of his fellow-students in
-the Brancacci Chapel, and one of these, named Piero Torrigiani, a
-brutal and proud fellow, got so angry one day that he hit
-Michelangelo a formidable blow on the nose, breaking the cartilage
-and disfiguring his critic for life. For this act of temper
-Torrigiani was banished from Florence, but it is pleasant to know
-that Michelangelo successfully interceded with Lorenzo on behalf of
-the man who had assaulted him.
-
-Michelangelo had just completed the _Battle of the Centaurs and
-Lapithae_ when he lost his best friend and munificent patron, to whom
-he had become deeply attached. On April 8th, 1492, Lorenzo the
-Magnificent died at Careggi, sincerely mourned, not only in Florence,
-but throughout Italy. The generous encouragement which he gave to
-art and letters, the power and splendour which he bestowed on
-Florence in exchange for her lost liberty, more as an infatuated
-lover dowering a wayward bride than as a conqueror imposing his will,
-the consummate ability displayed in his diplomatic dealings with the
-other Italian States, these were the principal merits which justified
-the proud title of _Il Magnifico_, conferred on him by his
-contemporaries, and which caused Lorenzo's death to be regarded as a
-public calamity throughout Italy.
-
-So much grief, says Condivi, did Michelangelo feel for his patron's
-death, that for some time he was quite unable to work. He left the
-Medicean palace, which had been his home during three years, and
-returned to his father's house. But his love for art was stronger
-than his grief, and after a few weeks, when he was himself again, he
-bought a large piece of marble that had for many years been exposed
-to the wind and rain, and carved a Hercules out of it. This statue
-was placed in the Strozzi Palace, where it stood until the siege of
-Florence in 1530, when Giovanni Battista della Palla bought it and
-sent it into France as a gift to King Francis I. It has
-unfortunately been lost.
-
-At this time Michelangelo applied himself most diligently to the
-study of anatomy, a profound knowledge of which is apparent in all
-his subsequent works. He was indebted to the Prior of Santo Spirito
-for many kindnesses, amongst others for the use of a room where he
-dissected the subjects, for the most part executed criminals, which
-the Prior placed at his disposal. "Nothing," says Condivi, "could
-have given Michelangelo more pleasure, and this was the beginning of
-his anatomical studies, which he followed until he had completely
-mastered the secrets of the human frame."
-
-It is surprising that artists of the Cinquecento should have enjoyed
-privileges for practically studying anatomy which were denied to
-physicians. When the famous Dr. Hunter saw Leonardo da Vinci's
-anatomical drawings and their descriptions, preserved in the library
-of George III., he discovered with astonishment that the artist had
-been a deep student, "and was at that time the best anatomist in the
-world." Michelangelo, as Vasari tells us, "dissected many dead
-bodies, zealously studying anatomy," whereas Cortesius, professor of
-anatomy at Bologna, who wrote a century later, complains that he was
-prevented finishing a treatise on "Practical Anatomy" in consequence
-of having only been able twice to dissect a human body in the course
-of twenty-four years. To please his friend the Prior, Michelangelo
-carved a crucifix in wood, a little under life size, which was placed
-over the high altar of the church of Santo Spirito, but which has
-since been lost.
-
-Piero de' Medici, the Magnifico's son and successor, had inherited
-none of his father's brilliant qualities. He was proud and insolent,
-and his coarse tastes and manners soon lost him that popularity which
-had been Lorenzo's stepping-stone to greatness. Michelangelo, who
-had been his companion as a boy, and whom he persuaded to accept his
-hospitality, was ill at ease in the house of a Prince who could so
-far insult the sensitive artist as to boast that he had two
-remarkable men in his establishment, Michelangelo and a certain
-Spanish groom remarkable for his athletic prowess, thus placing both
-on the same level.
-
-Too proud to tolerate such treatment, and foreseeing Piero's
-approaching fall, Michelangelo left Florence early in the year 1494
-and went first to Venice, where he failed to find employment, and
-thence to Bologna. Here he was hospitably received by a gentleman
-named Messer Gian Francesco Aldovrandi, who not only paid a fine of
-fifty Bolognese lire to which the impecunious young sculptor had been
-condemned for having neglected to provide himself with a passport,
-but invited him to his house and honoured him highly, "delighting in
-his genius, and every evening he made him read something from Dante
-or from Petrarca, or now and then from Boccaccio, until he fell
-asleep."
-
-While staying with Aldovrandi, and thanks to his recommendation,
-Michelangelo completed an unfinished statue of San Petronio in the
-church of San Domenico and carved a statuette of a kneeling angel
-holding a candlestick for the arca or shrine of the saint, begun by
-Nicolò di Bari. It is a beautiful and highly finished work, which
-was greatly admired and for which he received thirty ducats. His
-success aroused the fierce jealousy of the Bolognese sculptors, and
-it was under fear of personal violence from the native craftsmen, who
-accused him of taking the bread out of their mouths, that
-Michelangelo hastily left Bologna in the spring of 1495 and returned
-to Florence.
-
-In November of the preceding year Piero de' Medici had had to fly
-from the city over whose destinies he was so unfit to preside, and
-when Michelangelo returned to Florence he found that Savonarola had
-established a popular government. The fiery Dominican, with his
-inspired eloquence, his ascetic fervour and an energy bordering upon
-violence, was exactly a man after Michelangelo's heart, and
-Savonarola's impassioned and gloomy appeals made an indelible
-impression upon him. The _Last Judgment_ in the Sistine Chapel might
-almost be regarded as a pictorial rendering of one of the terrible
-frate's sermons.
-
-Although only twenty years of age, Michelangelo, of whom it has been
-said "that he was never young," was made a member of the General
-Council of Citizens. But his political duties did not take up much
-of his time, for to this period must be ascribed the statue of a
-youthful St. John the Baptist, executed for Lorenzo di Pier
-Francesco, a cousin of the exiled Medici, and now in the Berlin
-Museum. It is a charming but somewhat effeminate figure, differing
-strangely from the powerful and rugged style to which we are
-accustomed in Michelangelo's works. Lorenzo, however, was delighted
-with it and became a staunch friend and admirer of the young
-sculptor, whose studio he frequently visited. On one occasion he
-found Michelangelo at work on a _Sleeping Cupid_ so perfectly
-modelled and conceived in a spirit so truly Hellenic, as to appear a
-masterpiece of antique art. Lorenzo suggested that Michelangelo
-should make it look as if it had been buried under the earth for many
-centuries, so that the statue, being taken for a genuine antique,
-would sell much better, and the artist, more out of professional
-pride than in hopes of gain, followed his friend's suggestion. _The
-Sleeping Cupid_ was sent to Rome, where Raffaelo Riario, Cardinal di
-San Giorgio, bought it as an antique for two hundred ducats, an
-evidence not so much of the Cardinal's ignorance as of Michelangelo's
-careful study of classical art.
-
-This work was indirectly the cause of Michelangelo's first coming to
-Rome, for the Cardinal having discovered that his Cupid had been made
-in Florence was at first very angry at having been fooled, and
-insisted on the dealer, Baldassare del Milanese, taking back the
-statue and refunding the two hundred ducats (of which sum, by the
-way, Michelangelo had only received thirty ducats), but when his
-anger had subsided, the prelate, who was a liberal patron of art,
-shrewdly concluded that a sculptor who could so well imitate the
-antique was worth encouraging, and he forthwith despatched one of his
-gentlemen to Florence for the express purpose of discovering the
-mysterious forger and bringing him to Rome.
-
-The Cardinal's emissary, after much fruitless search, chanced upon
-Michelangelo in his studio, and was so struck with the masterful
-manner in which the young sculptor made a pen-drawing of a hand in
-his presence, that he began to cross-examine him discreetly about his
-other works, and gradually learned all the story of the Cupid.
-Michelangelo, who longed to see Rome, which his visitor extolled as
-the widest field for an artist to study and to show his genius in,
-readily consented to leave Florence. In fact it appears that he was
-not very popular among his fellow-citizens owing to his former
-intimacy with the exiled Medici, and so, towards the end of June,
-1496, he set foot in Rome for the first time. As to the _Sleeping
-Cupid_, nothing is known about its fate beyond the fact that it fell
-into the hands of Cesare Borgia at the sack of Urbino in 1592, and
-was by him presented to the Marchioness of Mantua, who in
-acknowledging the gift describes it as "without a peer among the
-works of modern times."
-
-Michelangelo was greatly disappointed in his hopes of obtaining
-lucrative employment from Cardinal Riario. Indeed, the only work
-which he did during the first few weeks of his sojourn consisted in a
-cartoon for a _Saint Francis receiving the Stigmata_, to be painted
-by the Cardinal's barber! Fortunately for the young artist a wealthy
-Roman gentleman, Messer Jacopo Galli, came to his rescue,
-commissioning a _Bacchus_, which is now in the National Museum at
-Florence, and a _Cupid_, believed by some to be the statue now in the
-Victoria and Albert Museum, South Kensington. Of all Michelangelo's
-works, this _Bacchus_ is certainly the most realistic and least
-dignified, representing as it does a youth in the first stage of
-intoxication, holding a cup in his right hand and in his left a bunch
-of grapes, from which a mischievous little Satyr is slily helping
-himself.
-
-The statue was greatly admired in Rome and was the means of bringing
-Michelangelo to the notice of the French king's envoy in Rome,
-Cardinal De la Groslaye de Villiers, who commissioned him to carve a
-marble group of _Our Lady holding the dead Christ in her arms_, for
-the price of four hundred and fifty golden ducats. The contract,
-dated August 26th, 1498, is still preserved in the Archivio
-Buonarroti, and concludes with these words: "And I, Jacopo Gallo,
-promise to his Most Reverend Lordship that the said Michelangelo will
-furnish the said work within one year, and that it shall be the most
-beautiful work in marble which Rome to-day can show, and that no
-master of our days shall be able to produce a better." We shall see,
-when describing this magnificent group, that Jacopo's boast and
-promise were more than justified.
-
-While in Rome, Michelangelo kept up an active correspondence with
-Messer Lodovico, who, it appears, found himself in great financial
-straits at this time. Being a most dutiful and affectionate son, the
-young sculptor sent every available scudo of his money to succour his
-father and his three younger brothers, namely Buonarroto, born in
-1477, whom he placed in the Arte della Seta; Giovan Simone, born in
-1479, who led a vagabond life and was a source of continual trouble,
-and Sigismondo, born in 1481, who became a soldier. The letters
-which Michelangelo, in the midst of his artistic labours, found time
-to write home, full of tender solicitude and good advice and
-invariably containing a remittance, give us a touching insight into
-the beautiful and disinterested character which lay hidden underneath
-his stern and decidedly unattractive exterior.
-
-He lived not only very economically, but penuriously, in order the
-better to help his family, and it appears that his health suffered
-not a little from these privations. His father heard of it, and
-wrote a letter, dated December 19th, 1500, in which these passages
-occur: "Economy is good, but above all do not be penurious; live
-moderately and do not stint yourself, and avoid hardships, because in
-your art, if you fall ill (which God forbid), you are a lost man.
-Above all things, never wash; have yourself rubbed down, but never
-wash!"
-
-When Michelangelo returned to Florence in the spring of 1501, the
-fame of the great works which he had accomplished in Rome had already
-preceded him, and he was generally admitted to be the first sculptor
-of the day. Commissions came pouring in upon him, including one from
-Cardinal Francesco Piccolomini, who afterwards became Pope Pius III.,
-for fifteen statues of saints to adorn the Piccolomini Chapel in the
-Duomo of Siena.
-
-But he completely neglected this work in order to devote himself with
-characteristic ardour to a more congenial task, that of carving a
-colossal statue of David out of a huge block of marble which had been
-previously spoiled by an inferior artist and abandoned as useless in
-the Opera del Duomo. Surmounting the enormous technical difficulties
-which he had to contend with, Michelangelo succeeded, after nearly
-two years of hard work, in evolving from the crippled block of marble
-one of the greatest masterpieces of modern art.
-
-On the 14th of May, 1504, _Il Gigante_, as it was called by the
-Florentines, left Michelangelo's workshop and was dragged with much
-difficulty to the Piazza della Signoria, where it stood until the
-year 1873, when it was removed to the hall of the Accademia delle
-Belle Arti. It has fortunately suffered very little from its
-exposure in the mild Florentine air, but the left arm was shattered
-by a stone during the tumults of 1527. The broken pieces were
-carefully collected, however, by Vasari and a young sculptor,
-Cecchino De' Rossi, who restored the arm in 1543. Another giant
-David in bronze was commissioned to Michelangelo in 1502 by the
-Republic, who wished to make a present of it to a French statesman,
-Florimond Robertet, but although this work is known to have remained
-for more than a hundred years in the château of Bury, near Blois, it
-has since disappeared.
-
-While wrestling with the difficulties of his _David_, Michelangelo
-found time to accomplish many other important works, including two
-marble tondi in bas-relief, the first of which is now in the National
-Museum at Florence and the other in the Royal Academy, London. Both
-represent the _Madonna and Child with the Infant St. John_, and
-although lacking in finish they deserve to rank among the finest of
-Michelangelo's works. The composition is beautiful and simple, the
-modelling bold and the expression of the Madonna singularly noble and
-striking.
-
-In April, 1503, Michelangelo was commissioned by the Operai of the
-Duomo to carve out of Carrara marble twelve colossal statues of the
-Apostles, one to be finished each year, and a workshop was specially
-built for the sculptor in the Borgo Pinti, but the contract could not
-be carried out, the unfinished _St. Matthew_, now in the courtyard of
-the Accademia, in Florence, being the only work which resulted from
-this commission: "And in order not altogether to give up painting,"
-says Condivi, "he executed a round panel of Our Lady for Messer
-Agnolo Doni, a Florentine citizen, for which he received seventy
-ducats." This tondo, representing _The Holy Family_, with nude
-figures in the background, is now in the Uffizi Gallery, and apart
-from its originality and artistic merit, it is especially interesting
-as being the only easel picture which may be attributed with absolute
-certainty to Michelangelo.
-
-In August, 1504, Michelangelo was commissioned by his friend and
-protector, Piero Soderini, Gonfaloniere of the Republic, to decorate
-a wall in the Sala del Gran Consiglio in the Palazzo Vecchio, a most
-flattering compliment to the young artist, as Leonardo da Vinci, then
-at the height of his fame, was already engaged in preparing cartoons
-for the opposite wall. Leonardo's designs represented the famous
-_Fight for the Standard_, an episode of the battle of Anghiari,
-fought in 1440, when the Florentines defeated Niccolò Piccinino.
-Michelangelo selected for his subject an episode in the war with
-Pisa, which gave him an opportunity to display his wonderful
-draughtsmanship and his profound knowledge of the human frame.
-
-Benvenuto Cellini, who copied the cartoon in 1513, just before its
-mysterious disappearance, describes it as follows: "Michelangelo
-portrayed a number of foot soldiers who, the season being summer, had
-gone to bathe in the Arno. He drew them at the moment the alarm is
-sounded, and the men, all naked, rush to arms. So splendid is their
-action that nothing survives of ancient or of modern art which
-touches the same lofty point of excellence; and, as I have already
-said, the design of the great Leonardo was itself most admirably
-beautiful. These two cartoons stood, one in the Palace of the
-Medici, the other in the hall of the Pope. So long as they remained
-intact they were the school of the world. Though the divine
-Michelangelo in later life finished that great chapel of Pope Julius,
-he never rose halfway to the same pitch of power; his genius never
-afterwards attained to the force of those first studies."
-
-Leonardo, after having begun painting a group of horsemen on the
-wall, abandoned the task with characteristic fickleness, and
-Michelangelo having been summoned to Rome in the beginning of 1505 by
-Pope Julius II., left his work unfinished. It is said that a
-worthless rival named Baccio Bandinelli, envious of Michelangelo's
-greatness, destroyed the famous cartoon of Pisa. A sketch of the
-whole composition may be seen in the Albertina Gallery at Vienna, but
-perhaps the most complete copy of the cartoon is the monochrome
-painting belonging to the Earl of Leicester, at Holkham Hall.
-
-
-
-THE TRAGEDY OF THE TOMB
-
-Michelangelo little suspected when he left Florence that he was
-bidding adieu for ever to his happiness and peace of mind. Hitherto
-he had had to deal with generous tyrants, such as the Medici, with
-rivals whose envy was shorn of dangers by their cowardice, and with a
-protector such as Piero Soderini, whom Machiavelli taunted with being
-a weakling only fit for the Limbo of Infants. It was not until he
-came to Rome that he was brought face to face with a man blessed or
-cursed with indomitable energy, boundless ambition and a morbid
-restlessness which was probably the resultant of these two forces.
-Both Julius II. and Michelangelo were what their contemporaries
-called _uomini terribili_, proud, passionate, given to sudden bursts
-of fury, yet generous withal and truly great. For two such men to
-live together in uninterrupted peace and goodwill would have been a
-sheer impossibility.
-
-After some months of hesitation, Julius II. finally decided upon the
-best way of employing Michelangelo's talents. He resolved to have a
-magnificent monument erected during his lifetime, and confided the
-task to the young sculptor. In an incredibly short time Michelangelo
-prepared his great design, which pleased the Pope so much that he at
-once sent him to Carrara to quarry the necessary marble. During the
-eight months which he spent at Carrara, Michelangelo blocked out two
-of the figures for the tomb, so anxious was he to begin his colossal
-work.
-
-In November Michelangelo returned to Rome, where a house and spacious
-workshop were as signed to him near the Vatican, and in January,
-1506, most of the marble, which had come by water, was spread all
-over the Piazza of St. Peter's: "This immense quantity of marble,"
-says Condivi, "was the admiration of all and a joy to the Pope, who
-heaped immeasurable favours upon Michelangelo, and was so interested
-in his work that he ordered a drawbridge to be thrown across from the
-Corridore to the rooms of Michelangelo, by which he might visit him
-in private."
-
-Michelangelo's original project of the tomb subsequently underwent so
-many modifications and reductions, that Condivi's account of what the
-monument should have been is deeply interesting: "The tomb was to
-have had four faces, two of eighteen braccia, that served for the
-flanks, so that it was to be a square and a half in plan. All round
-about the outside were niches for statues, and between niche and
-niche terminal figures; to these were bound other statues, like
-prisoners, upon certain square plinths, rising from the ground and
-projecting from the monument. They represented the liberal arts,
-each with her symbol, denoting that, like Pope Julius, all the
-virtues were the prisoners of Death, because they would never find
-such favour and encouragement as he gave them. Above these ran the
-cornice that tied all the work together. On its plane were four
-great statues; one of these, the Moses, may be seen in San Pietro ad
-Vincula. So the work mounted upward until it ended in a plane. Upon
-it were two angels who supported an arc; one appeared to be smiling
-as though he rejoiced that the soul of the Pope had been received
-amongst the blessed spirits, the other wept, as if sad that the world
-had been deprived of such a man. Above one end was the entrance to
-the sepulchre in a small chamber, built like a temple; in the middle
-was a marble sarcophagus, where the body of the Pope was to be
-buried; everything worked out with marvellous art. Briefly, more
-than forty statues went to the whole work, not counting the subjects
-in mezzo rilievo to be cast in bronze, all appropriate in their
-stories and proclaiming the acts of this great Pontiff."
-
-As the monument would have covered an area of about 34½ feet by 23
-feet, the church of St. Peter, although restored by Nicholas V., was
-found to be too small to contain it, and Julius II. decided to
-rebuild the whole church on a more magnificent scale, after designs
-prepared by Bramante.
-
-The eager enthusiasm with which Michelangelo attacked his colossal
-task was not destined to last long. One day a quantity of marble
-arrived from Carrara, and Michelangelo, desiring at once to pay the
-freight and porterage, went to ask the Pope for money, but found his
-Holiness occupied. He paid the men out of his own pocket, but when
-he returned on several succeeding days he found access to the Vatican
-more difficult than usual, and finally learned that the Pope had
-given orders that he should not be admitted. Julius II., always
-entangled in warlike adventures, was evidently short of money and
-could not or would not pay Michelangelo at the time. The proud and
-short-tempered sculptor flew into a passion, and exclaiming that
-"henceforward the Pope must look for him elsewhere if he wanted him,"
-took horse at once and returned to Florence, vainly pursued by five
-messengers from the Pope.
-
-It was thus that the gigantic work on which he had set his heart was
-interrupted for the first time, and the curtain rose on the first act
-of that "tragedy of the tomb," as Condivi appropriately calls it, by
-which the rest of Michelangelo's life was darkened.
-
-He had no sooner arrived in Florence than he received an imperative
-order from the Pope to return immediately to Rome under pain of his
-displeasure, but Michelangelo's blood was up, and he disregarded
-alike the threats of the Pope and the exhortations of Piero Soderini,
-who was greatly embarrassed, having received three official Briefs
-from Julius II., demanding that the artist should be sent back either
-by fair means or by force. Fearing actual violence, Michelangelo had
-made up his mind to go to Constantinople, but the Gonfaloniere
-dissuaded him, saying "that it was better to die with the Pope than
-to live with the Turk."
-
-In the meantime, Julius II., after subduing Perugia, had entered
-Bologna in triumph on November 11th, 1506, and he had not been many
-days in the town before he despatched another urgent message to the
-Signoria asking for Michelangelo to be sent to him. The artist
-finally gave in, and proceeded to Bologna, armed with a most
-flattering letter from the Signoria, but feeling "like a man with a
-halter round his neck." His misgivings, however, were unfounded, for
-Julius II., who was only too glad to have won his artist back,
-welcomed Michelangelo most cordially and commissioned him to make a
-great portrait statue of him in bronze, to be placed in front of the
-church of San Petronio. And thus were these two men, who had so many
-points in common that they regarded each other with mutual fear, like
-giants conscious of their strength, reconciled for the time.
-
-[Illustration: THE CREATION OF MAN.]
-
-The Pope returned to Rome in very good spirits, leaving Michelangelo
-in Bologna to finish the colossal statue, which was only completed on
-February 21st, 1508, after much hard work and many disappointments,
-chiefly caused by the ignorance of the bronze-founder, who cast it
-faultily. It is greatly to be regretted that this work, which cost
-Michelangelo over a year of unremitting labour, should have been
-destroyed in 1511, when the Bentivogli returned to Bologna and drove
-out the Papal Legate. A huge cannon, ironically called La Giulia,
-was cast out of the broken fragments. Michelangelo, having completed
-his task, hurried back to Florence, and three days after his arrival
-Messer Lodovico emancipated his son from parental control, as we
-learn from a document dated March 13th, 1508.
-
-It appears that Michelangelo intended to settle down for several
-years in his native city in order to decorate the Sala del Consiglio,
-for which he was to receive three thousand ducats, and to carry out
-other important commissions, including that of twelve statues of the
-Apostles for Santa Maria del Fiore, but "his Medusa," as he called
-Julius II., would not suffer him to remain in peace, and summoned him
-to Rome.
-
-
-
-THE SISTINE CHAPEL
-
-The artist obeyed, hoping that the Pope would allow him to go on with
-the tomb, but, during his absence, Michelangelo's rivals had
-persuaded Julius II. that it was unlucky to have a monument erected
-during his lifetime, and that it would be much better to set
-Michelangelo to work on the vault of the Sistine Chapel.
-
-This they did maliciously, because they never suspected that
-Michelangelo was as great a painter as he was a sculptor, and hoped
-that he would prove himself inferior to the task, and thus lose the
-Pontiff's favour. "All the disagreements which I have had with Pope
-Julius," wrote Michelangelo to Marco Vigerio, "have been brought
-about by the envy of Bramante and of Raphael of Urbino," who were the
-cause that his monument was not finished during his lifetime.
-Bitter, unscrupulous rivalry was the leper-spot that marked the
-Italian Renaissance, especially at the Papal Court.
-
-Michelangelo would gladly have declined the commission, for which he
-considered himself unfit, but, seeing the Pope's obstinacy, he
-reluctantly set to work on May 10th, 1508. The difficulties which he
-had to surmount were enormous, but he was not a man to be frightened
-by obstacles, however formidable. Knowing little or nothing of the
-technicalities of fresco painting, Michelangelo at first called six
-Florentine painters to his aid, including his old friends Francesco
-Granacci and Giuliano Bugiardini. But he was too exacting, and aimed
-at an ideal of perfection which his assistants could never attain, so
-that in January, 1509, he sent them all away, and destroying the work
-done by them, shut himself alone in the chapel to wrestle
-single-handed with his gigantic task.
-
-The result fully justified his confidence in his own powers. To
-attempt an adequate description of the vault of the Sistine Chapel in
-this little book would be a hopeless task. The stupendous frescoes
-which adorn it, although described in hundreds of volumes, still
-afford material for much original study and research, but we must
-here content ourselves with a mere enumeration of the principal
-motives which go to make up this grand pictorial symphony.
-
-Michelangelo chose for his subject the Story of the Creation, the
-Fall of Man, the Flood, and the Second Entry of Sin into the World,
-illustrated by a series of nine compositions on the central space of
-the ceiling. Twenty magnificent nude figures, representing Athletes,
-decorate the corners of these central compositions, and support
-bronze medallions held in place by oak garlands and draperies. The
-shape of the ceiling is what is commonly called a barrel vaulting
-resting on lunettes, six to the length and two to the width of the
-building. The second part of the decoration demonstrates the need
-for a scheme of Salvation, promised by the Prophets and Sibyls, whose
-majestic figures are painted alternately in the triangular spaces
-between the lunettes, in the lower part of which is a series of
-wonderful groups representing the ancestors of Christ.
-
-Michelangelo, although engaged on a great pictorial work, never
-considered himself as anything but a sculptor, and followed in
-painting the same systems that he would have adopted in his own art.
-Sir Charles Holroyd, in his recent most valuable contribution to
-Michelangelesque literature, very justly remarks: "When Pope Julius
-prevented Michelangelo from going on with his beloved project of the
-tomb and made him paint the vault, the master set to work to produce
-a similar conception to the tomb in a painted form. The vault became
-a great temple of painted marble and painted sculptures raised in mid
-air above the walls of the chapel. The cornices and pilasters are of
-simple Renaissance architecture, the only ornaments he allowed
-himself to use being similar to those he would have used as a
-sculptor. Acorns, the family device of the della Rovere, rams'
-skulls, and scallop shells, and the one theme of decoration that
-Michelangelo always delighted in--the human figure. The Prophets and
-Sibyls took the positions occupied by the principal figures designed
-for the tomb, like the great statue of Moses. The Athletes at the
-corner of the ribs of the roof were in place of the bound captives,
-two of which are now in the Louvre, and the nine histories of the
-Creation and the Flood fill the panels like the bronze reliefs of the
-tomb."
-
-Michelangelo must have toiled with almost superhuman energy at his
-great work. In a letter to his favourite brother, Buonarroto, dated
-October 17th, 1509, he writes: "I live here in great distress and
-with the greatest fatigue of body, and have not a friend of any sort,
-and do not want one, and have not even enough time to eat necessary
-food." This is not surprising when we remember that as early as the
-1st of November, 1509, the first and most important part of this
-colossal work, which comprises three hundred and ninety-four figures,
-the majority ten feet high, was exposed to view, and greatly admired
-by the Pope, who, being vehement by nature and impatient of delay,
-insisted upon having it uncovered, although it was still incomplete.
-
-Such was the impatience of Julius II. that on one occasion he
-threatened to have Michelangelo thrown down off the scaffolding if he
-did not hasten the completion of the work, and even went so far as to
-strike the artist with a stick. Thus urged, Michelangelo uncovered
-his work on the 1st of November, 1512, although he used to say in
-after years that he had been prevented by the hurry of the Pope from
-finishing it as he would have wished. "Michelangelo's fame and the
-expectation they had of him," says Condivi, "drew the whole of Rome
-to the chapel, whither the Pope also rushed, even before the dust
-raised by the taking down the scaffolding had settled."
-
-
-
-SECOND FLORENTINE PERIOD
-
-Julius II. died on February 21st, 1513, four months after the
-completion of the great work with which his name will remain as
-indelibly associated as that of Michelangelo. Shortly before his
-death he had ordered that the tomb which Michelangelo had begun
-should be finished, and had instructed his nephew, Cardinal Aginense,
-and Cardinal Santi Quattro, to see that everything should be carried
-out according to the original designs. But his executors, finding
-the project far too grand and expensive, had it altered, so that
-Michelangelo began all over again.
-
-He set to work with great energy and goodwill, determined to finish
-the monument now that its completion appeared to him almost as a
-sacred debt to the memory of his dead patron. But the strange
-fatality that presided over the tragedy of the tomb again interfered.
-Cardinal Giovanni de' Medici, who had been Michelangelo's friend and
-fellow-pupil at the Medicean Court, succeeded Julius II. on the
-pontifical throne and assumed the name of Leo X. No sooner were the
-magnificent festivities over with which he celebrated his accession,
-than he sent for Michelangelo and ordered him to proceed to Florence
-to ornament the façade of San Lorenzo with sculpture and marble work.
-It was in vain that Michelangelo protested, saying that he was bound
-by contract to finish the tomb before undertaking any other
-commission, for Leo X. was as self-willed and imperious as his
-predecessor, and "in this fashion," says Condivi, "Michelangelo left
-the tomb and betook himself weeping to Florence."
-
-It is not surprising that the artist should have wept tears of bitter
-disappointment, for we learn from a letter to his brother Buonarroto,
-dated June 15th, 1515, that at this time not only had he completed
-the Moses and the Captives in marble, but the panels in relief were
-ready for casting. Had he been left in peace, Michelangelo would
-certainly have finished the monument to Pope Julius in its modified
-form in half the time which he wasted quarrying marble from Carrara
-and Pietrasanta for the façade of San Lorenzo. For over two years
-Michelangelo was engaged in the tedious work of roadmaking and
-quarrying. In August, 1518, he wrote: "I must be very patient until
-the mountains are tamed and the men are mastered. Then we shall get
-on more quickly. But what I have promised, that will I do by some
-means, and I will make the most beautiful thing that has ever been
-done in Italy if God helps me."
-
-He had evidently warmed to his work, and it is melancholy to think
-that Fate again interposed to prevent its completion. Giuliano de'
-Medici, the Pope's only brother, and Lorenzo, his nephew, having died
-at this time, Leo X. ordered Michelangelo to interrupt the façade of
-San Lorenzo and to build a new sacristy in which he proposed to erect
-a monument to their memory. The document exonerating Michelangelo
-from all duties and obligations in connection with the façade is
-dated March 10th, 1520.
-
-Michelangelo only now found time to carry out a commission which he
-had received seven years previously from a Roman gentleman, Metello
-Vari, namely a nude statue of Christ bearing the cross. It was
-finished in the summer of 1521 and sent to Rome, the extremities
-being left in rough to prevent their being broken during the journey.
-Pietro Urbino accompanied the statue to Rome, with orders to complete
-it, and very nearly spoiled it by his careless and inferior
-workmanship. The _Risen Christ_, now in the church of the Minerva,
-is one of the most noble and majestic of religious statues in
-existence; the torso and arms are particularly fine, but the hands
-and feet, which were spoiled by Urbino, are stumpy and defective.
-
-Leo X.'s pontificate, which, although short, was one of the most
-glorious and eventful in the history of art, came to an abrupt
-conclusion on December 1st, 1521. By a strange irony of fate, the
-magnificent patron of art and letters was succeeded by a pious and
-simple-minded Dutch prelate, who regarded statues as pagan idols, and
-said that the Sistine Chapel was "nothing but a room full of naked
-people." There is little doubt that he secretly longed to have it
-whitewashed. Fortunately for art and artists, his pontificate was of
-brief duration, and in 1523 Cardinal Giulio de' Medici was elected in
-his stead, under the name of Clement VII.
-
-In the following year Michelangelo finished the new sacristy of San
-Lorenzo, and immediately set to work on the Medicean tombs. But he
-was constantly worried and interrupted by new commissions from the
-Pope, who wanted him, among other things, to build a library in which
-to place the famous collection of books and manuscripts begun by
-Cosimo de' Medici: "I cannot work at one thing with my hands and at
-another with my brain!" exclaimed the artist in despair.
-Nevertheless he undertook to build the library, and carried on both
-works at the same time, constantly urged on by Pope Clement, who
-wrote to him in an autograph letter: "Thou knowest that Popes have no
-long lives, and we cannot yearn more than we do to behold the chapel
-with the tombs of our kinsmen, and so also the library."
-
-These were troublous times for Italy. After the disastrous battle of
-Pavia, in which he had lost everything "except honour," Francis I.
-concluded with the Sforza of Milan, with Venice, Florence, and Pope
-Clement VII. a league against Charles V., which proved fatal to all
-who took part in it. In 1527, a rabble of German and Spanish
-soldiers of fortune, led by the renegade Connétable de Bourbon, took
-and pillaged Rome, and the Pope himself was besieged in the Castle of
-Saint Angelo for nine months. The Florentines availed themselves of
-this opportunity to shake off the despotic yoke of the Medici, but
-two years later, Charles V. concluded the peace of Barcelona with
-Clement VII., one of the conditions being that he should re-establish
-the Medicean rule in Florence. But the citizens would not give up
-their newly-acquired liberty without a struggle, and prepared for a
-desperate resistance. Michelangelo was appointed Commissary-General
-of defence, and showed himself worthy of the confidence placed in him
-by his fellow-citizens.
-
-It was in a great measure due to the skill with which he fortified
-the town, and more especially the hill of San Miniato, that Florence
-was enabled to withstand the attacks of the Imperial troops for
-twelve months. But the treachery of Malatesta Baglioni, who
-commanded the troops of the Republic, paralyzed the efforts of
-Michelangelo and of its other brave defenders, and in August, 1530,
-the city fell. Alessandro de' Medici returned in triumph to
-Florence, and would certainly have beheaded Michelangelo, who only
-saved himself by hiding in the bell-tower of San Nicolò beyond the
-Arno, until the first fury of his enemies was over.
-
-In spite of his important military duties, Michelangelo continued
-working at the Medicean tombs during the siege, and also painted a
-panel picture, representing _Leda and the Swan_, originally intended
-for the Duke of Ferrara, but which he afterwards gave to his pupil
-Antonio Mini, together with many cartoons and drawings, that he might
-dower two sisters with the proceeds. It was sold to the King of
-France and hung at Fontainebleau until the time of Louis XIII., one
-of whose ministers ordered it to be destroyed as an improper picture.
-According to another version, however, it was only hidden, and
-afterwards brought to England. The _Leda and the Swan_ now in the
-National Gallery is regarded by some as the damaged and much restored
-original of Michelangelo's famous picture. Clement VII.'s anger soon
-abated, and Michelangelo was able to return to his work, thanks
-chiefly to the kind offices of Baccio Valori, the Papal envoy in
-Florence, to whom the sculptor presented, out of gratitude, the fine
-statue of _Apollo,_ now in the National Museum at Florence.
-
-[Illustration: TOMB OF LORENZO DE' MEDICI.]
-
-The Medicean tombs progressed but slowly, for all this time
-Michelangelo was worried almost to death by the Duke of Urbino, a
-nephew of Julius II., who insisted upon his finishing the famous
-tomb, while Clement VII., on the other hand, threatened the artist
-with excommunication if he neglected his work in the new sacristy for
-anything else. Probably the first statue to be finished was the
-beautiful Madonna suckling the Child Jesus, represented as a strong
-boy straddling across her knee. It is one of Michelangelo's noblest
-works, possessing all the majestic simplicity of his earlier Madonnas
-enhanced by greater power.
-
-To give an adequate description of the tombs of Giuliano and Lorenzo
-de' Medici would be impossible within the narrow limits of this
-little book. Suffice it to say that the princes are represented in
-the garb of ancient warriors, each seated in a niche above a
-sarcophagus, on which two allegorical figures recline. Lorenzo
-appears to be plunged in sorrowful meditation; at his feet recline
-the colossal statues of _Evening_, represented by a powerful male
-figure, apparently on the point of falling asleep, and _Dawn_,
-symbolized by a beautiful young woman in the act of awaking, not to
-joy and hope, but to another day of sorrow. The beauty of this last
-figure cannot be described; it is such as the imagination of the
-ancient Greeks might have endowed a goddess with. The statue of
-_Dawn_ was finished in 1531, soon after the fall of Florence and the
-return of the Medici, and there is little doubt that Michelangelo
-intended his mournful figures to express sorrow at the loss of
-Florentine liberty, rather than at the death of the two young
-princes. The same idea is evident in the tomb of Giuliano, with the
-two figures of _Night_, symbolized by a sleeping woman of singular
-beauty and power, and _Day_, a vigorous bearded giant just rising to
-his work and looking over his shoulder as if dazzled by the glare of
-the rising sun. Although the head of _Day_ is unfinished, it is a
-striking example of how Michelangelo was able to give life and
-expression to his work from the first stroke of his chisel.
-
-
-
-THE LAST JUDGMENT
-
-In 1534 Michelangelo left Florence for the last time. His proud and
-independent spirit was unable to tolerate Alessandro's petty tyranny.
-The unfinished bust of Brutus, now in the Bargello, a vigorous and
-striking piece of work, is another proof of his intense longing for
-liberty. On arriving in Rome he found that Clement VII. had died two
-days previously, and that Paul III., Farnese, had been elected Pope.
-
-Michelangelo had finally come to an understanding with the executors
-of Julius II., the agreement being that he should make a tomb with
-one façade only, using the marbles already carved for the
-quadrangular tomb and supplying six statues from his own hand, the
-rest of the work to be completed by other artists under his
-supervision. He therefore hoped to finish the tomb which had
-embittered thirty years of his life, but once more he was doomed to
-disappointment, for Paul III. immediately appointed him chief
-architect, sculptor and painter of the Vatican, with a pension of
-1,200 golden crowns, and ordered him to carry out a commission which
-Clement VII. had given him shortly before his death. It was no less
-a task than to paint the end wall of the Sistine Chapel. Prayers and
-remonstrance were alike unavailing, and the doors of the Sistine
-closed once more upon the master, not to be opened again until the
-Christmas of 1541, when his _Last Judgment_ was uncovered "to the
-admiration of Rome and of the whole world."
-
-Thirty years earlier Michelangelo had depicted the Creation on the
-vault of this same chapel; he now took for his subject the final doom
-of all things created. The colossal work which cost him eight years'
-labour is a magnificent but almost terrifying pictorial rendering of
-the _Dies Irae_, the Day of Wrath, when "even the just shall not feel
-secure." Awe and terror are equally apparent among the spirits of
-the blessed crowding round the dread Judge, and on the despairing
-countenances of the condemned souls dragged down by hideous demons
-towards the infernal river, where Charon in his boat "beckons to them
-with eyes of fire and beats the delaying souls with uplifted oar."
-The rendering of the subject is thoroughly Dantesque, and very
-different from the conventional treatment of the same theme by all
-preceding artists. The composition, however, and indeed several
-individual groups and figures, remind us forcibly of the Campo Santo
-at Pisa.
-
-Although all true artists received this work with enthusiasm, as
-Vasari says, and came from every part of Italy to study it,
-Michelangelo's enemies, including Pietro Aretino, the most immoral
-writer of his age, criticised it as a highly improper painting,
-because most of the figures were nude. So incensed was Michelangelo
-at this that he revenged himself by painting one of his critics,
-Messer Biagio da Cesena, as Minos surrounded by a crowd of devils.
-Some years later Paul IV. obtained Michelangelo's consent to partly
-drape most of the figures, and the work was done with commendable
-discretion by Daniele da Volterra, who thereby earned the nickname of
-Il Braghettone, or the breeches-maker.
-
-Unfortunately the smoke from the altar candles and censers, and the
-dust of centuries have darkened and almost completely destroyed the
-original colour of this fresco; ominous cracks have also appeared in
-several places, but it is to be hoped that time will spare one of the
-greatest masterpieces of modern art for many centuries to come.
-
-No sooner had Michelangelo finished the _Last Judgment_, than Paul
-III. set him to work on the side walls of the chapel which Antonio da
-San Gallo had just completed, and which is now known as the Cappella
-Paolina. Michelangelo was nearly seventy years old at this time, and
-fresco painting over a large surface is a fatiguing task even for a
-young man, but the veteran artist obeyed, and in 1549 he completed
-what was to be his last pictorial work, the two frescoes representing
-the _Conversion of St. Paul_ and the _Martyrdom of St. Peter_.
-
-The composition of these pictures is as masterly as ever, and the
-drawing, especially in the fore-shortened figures, faultless, but for
-the first time we are aware of something cold and unnatural, very
-different from the glorious life and power with which the frescoes of
-the Sistine literally glow. Michelangelo was getting old, and even
-his Titanic frame could not withstand the insidious attacks of time.
-He was seventy-five years of age when he carried these frescoes to
-completion, and he himself confessed to Vasari that he did so "with
-great effort and fatigue." Nevertheless he found sufficient time and
-strength to complete the famous monument of Pope Julius II. during
-the intervals of his fresco painting, and in 1545 the tragedy of the
-tomb finally came to an end.
-
-It must have been with feelings of mingled relief and bitterness that
-Michelangelo surveyed the much modified tomb in the church of San
-Pietro in Vincoli. The mighty design which had fired his youthful
-ambition forty years previously had dwindled down to a comparatively
-unimposing monument, but everybody will agree with Condivi when he
-says that "although botched and patched up, it is the most worthy
-monument to be found in Rome, or perhaps in the world; if for nothing
-else, at least for the three statues that are by the hand of the
-master." Of the central figure, representing Moses, we shall have
-occasion to speak later on; the remaining statues by Michelangelo to
-which Condivi alludes are two female figures of rare beauty,
-representing Active and Contemplative Life. The rest of the tomb was
-finished by Raffaello da Montelupo and by other assistants under the
-master's supervision.
-
-Having, as best he could, fulfilled his sacred pledge to the memory
-of Julius II., Michelangelo appeared to consider his artistic career
-as practically at an end. He was always inclined to sadness, but a
-cloud of deeper melancholy seemed to settle over him, and like
-Titian, Tintoretto, and other artists who attained to great old age,
-he turned his thoughts almost exclusively to religious speculation.
-In one of his sonnets he beautifully expresses the yearning for peace
-and rest which had taken possession of his storm-tossed soul:
-
- Painting nor sculpture now can lull to rest
- My soul, that turns to His great love on high,
- Whose arms to clasp us on the Cross were spread.[2]
-
-
-[2] "The Sonnets of Michelangelo." By J. A. Symonds, No. lxv.
-
-
-Henceforward he regarded his art as a devotional exercise more than
-anything else. The unfinished marble group of the _Deposition_, now
-in the Duomo at Florence, and which he intended should be placed over
-his tomb, was carved by the master during these years of serene
-preparation for his approaching end.
-
-Throughout his long and laborious career, devoted to the threefold
-worship of God, art and his country, Michelangelo had constantly
-refused to think of other ties, remarking that he had "espoused the
-affectionate fantasy which makes of art an idol." From some of his
-sonnets, however, it would appear that while at the court of Lorenzo
-the Magnificent he had secretly cherished a deep and hopeless passion
-for the beautiful Luigia de' Medici, who died in 1494. Forty years
-were to elapse ere in his heart, yet youthful at the approach of age,
-another woman, and she the first of her era, Vittoria Colonna,
-occupied the place left vacant by Luigia de' Medici. The friendship
-between these two lofty spirits, based upon mutual admiration and
-esteem, is one of the most beautiful romances in history, and
-inspired Michelangelo with some of his finest poems. It was brought
-to a close in 1547 by Vittoria Colonna's death, which left
-Michelangelo "dazed as one bereft of sense." "Nothing," says
-Condivi, "grieved him so much in after years as that when he went to
-see her on her death-bed he did not kiss her on the brow or face, as
-he did kiss her hand."
-
-
-
-ST. PETER'S
-
-It will be remembered that Pope Julius II. had ordered Bramante to
-rebuild the church of St. Peter's on a more magnificent scale, in
-order that his tomb should derive additional grandeur from its
-stately surroundings. Bramante was succeeded by Raphael, Peruzzi and
-Antonio da Sangallo, and when the latter died in October, 1546, Paul
-III. conferred the post of architect-in-chief upon Michelangelo. But
-the aged master at first refused, saying that architecture was not
-his art, and it was only when the Pope issued a peremptory _motu
-proprio_ that he set to work, on condition that he should receive no
-payment for his services.
-
-Michelangelo returned to Bramante's original design of the Greek
-cross, which had undergone considerable alterations, his object being
-to erect a perfectly symmetrical building in such a manner that its
-dominant feature, both from within and without, should be the cupola.
-He began by demolishing most of Sangallo's work, and severely putting
-a stop to all jobbery, thereby creating a number of enemies who did
-all in their power to have him removed from his post. But Julius
-III., who succeeded Paul III. in 1549, had implicit faith in
-Michelangelo, and the colossal work proceeded so rapidly, in spite of
-intrigues and opposition, that in 1557 the great cupola was commenced.
-
-The master was now unable, owing to his extreme old age, to
-personally superintend the building, so that he constructed a wooden
-model, still preserved at the Vatican, after which his assistants
-carried on the work. From the window of his house Michelangelo used
-to watch for hours together the huge cupola slowly rounding itself
-against the sky, and wondered, perhaps, in how many years after his
-death it would be finished. The evening of Michelangelo's long life
-was saddened by the loss of nearly all who were near and dear to him.
-His two remaining brothers (for Buonarroto had died of the plague in
-1528) passed away in Florence, and the only representative of the
-family, besides the aged artist, was his nephew Leonardo, only son of
-his favourite brother, Buonarroto. Although a confirmed bachelor
-himself, Michelangelo prevailed upon his nephew to marry, and
-Leonardo became the head of the still existing branch of the
-Buonarroti family. Another terrible loss to Michelangelo was the
-death of his faithful servant Francesco Urbino, of whom he wrote to
-Vasari: "While Urbino living kept me alive, in dying he has taught me
-to die, not unwillingly, but rather with a desire for death. The
-better part of me has gone with him, and nothing is left to me now
-but endless sorrow."
-
-In spite of old age, illness and afflictions, Michelangelo's last
-years were perhaps the busiest of a life of uninterrupted work. To
-this period must be attributed the plan for the improvements upon the
-Capitol; the design for the church of San Giovanni del Fiorentini;
-the drawing for the monument to Giangiacomo de' Medici which Leone
-Leoni erected in the Milan Cathedral; the plans for the conversion of
-the Baths of Diocletian into the church of Santa Maria degli Angeli,
-and a number of other drawings and sketches for palaces, statues,
-monuments, which other artists carried out. He found time for all
-these things while actively superintending the construction of St.
-Peter's, and yet his restless spirit was not satisfied. In a
-beautiful sonnet, beginning with the words
-
- Giunto è gia' il corso della vita mia,
-
-he laments the loss of his former creative power, and says that he
-has already felt the pangs of one death, while another is fast
-approaching. Nothing could be more pathetic than the spectacle of
-this strong creative spirit, already imprisoned in the iron embrace
-of death, yet struggling, like a Laocoon, against inevitable
-dissolution. Although nearly ninety years of age, Michelangelo would
-still walk abroad in all weathers, taking no precaution whatever. On
-February 14th, 1564, a friend of the master, Tiberio Calcagni, met
-him in the street on foot. It was raining hard, and Calcagni
-affectionately upbraided the old man for going about in such weather:
-"Leave me alone," cried Michelangelo fiercely, "I am ill, and cannot
-find rest anywhere."
-
-He spent the next four days in an armchair near the fire, not
-complaining of any particular suffering, "quite composed and fully
-conscious," as Diomede Leoni wrote to Leonardo, "but oppressed with
-continual drowsiness." In order to shake it off, the brave old man
-tried to mount his horse and go for a ride, but he was too weak.
-Without a word he sat down again in his armchair, and on the
-afternoon of February 18th, 1564, a little before five o'clock,
-Michelangelo peacefully breathed his last. "He made his will in
-three words," says Vasari, "committing his soul into the hands of
-God, his body to the earth, and his goods to his nearest relatives."
-
-Leonardo arrived in Rome three days after his uncle's death. He had
-some difficulty in fulfilling Michelangelo's wish to be buried in his
-native town, as the Romans, who had conferred the citizenship on the
-artist, would not allow his body to be removed. At last the remains
-were smuggled out of Rome in a bale of merchandise and conveyed to
-Florence, where they were buried with great pomp and solemnity in the
-church of Santa Croce. For some unaccountable reason the group of
-the Pietà which Michelangelo had intended for his monument, was not
-placed over his tomb. The present very ugly monument was designed by
-Vasari at Leonardo's request. It bears the following inscription:
-
- D. O. M.
- MICHAELI ANGELO BONAROTIO
- VETUSTA . SIMONIORUM . FAMILIA
- SCULPTORI . PICTORI . ET . ARCHITECTO
- FAMA . OMNIBUS . NOTISSIMO
- LEONARDUS . PATRUO . AMANTISS . ET . DE . SE . OPTIME . MERITO
- TRANSLATIS . ROMA . EJUS . OSSIBUS . ATQUE . IN . HOC . TEMPLO
- MAJORUM . SUORUM . SEPULCRO . CONDITIS
- COHORTANTE. SEREN. COSMO. MED. MAGNO. ETRUR. DUCE. P. C.
- ANN. SAL. M. D. LXX
- VIXIT. ANN. LXXXVIII. M. XI. D. XV.
-
-
-Other monuments to Michelangelo exist in the church of the Santissimi
-Apostoli at Rome, and on the hill of San Miniato, overlooking
-Florence, which he so bravely defended. But the noblest monument of
-Michelangelo the artist are his undying works, and the highest praise
-of Michelangelo the man and the Christian is contained in these
-simple words of a contemporary, Scipione Ammirato, "During the ninety
-years of his life, and in spite of numberless temptations,
-Michelangelo never did or said anything that was not pure and great."
-
-
-
-
-THE ART OF MICHELANGELO
-
-In the history of Art, Michelangelo stands isolated, a colossal
-figure looming terrible and majestic, a Titan towering far above the
-sons of men. Yet his was an age of giants. When Michelangelo came
-before the world the glorious tide of the Renaissance was still
-rising; sculpture and architecture had been brought to an
-unprecedented degree of excellence by such men as Lorenzo Ghiberti,
-Donatello and Brunelleschi, and following in Masaccio's footsteps, a
-host of great painters had successfully striven to renovate and
-perfect their art until it culminated in a Raphael. Leonardo da
-Vinci was already famous before Michelangelo had touched chisel or
-brush, but neither Leonardo's encyclopaedic achievements nor
-Raphael's meteorlike career can be regarded as the ultimate
-expression, the high-water mark of the Italian Renaissance.
-
-In Michelangelo we behold the giant embodiment of the true spirit of
-that wonderful period, the synthesis of its various forms of beauty
-and perfection, the final manifestation of its aesthetic
-possibilities. When Art first shook off the trammels of
-mediaevalism, she was content to worship at the shrine of Truth; with
-Botticelli and Leonardo she passed into vague regions of poetry.
-Raphael touched a more human note, often soaring to sublime
-harmonies: with Michelangelo the Renaissance reached its fullest
-development, attaining to a spiritual height, an almost superhuman
-loftiness hitherto undreamt of. Other men had excelled in painting,
-in sculpture, or in architecture before him, but Michelangelo was the
-first to attain perfection in every branch of Art, and such was his
-strong creative individuality that he left nothing to which he
-applied himself at the same stage where he had found it, bringing
-every manifestation of Art to the highest degree of perfection of
-which it was capable, and crowning all with that glorious aureola of
-spiritual grandeur which is the most awe-inspiring characteristic of
-his works.
-
-We have said that Michelangelo stands alone. Of other artists it is
-easy to trace the aesthetic derivation, but he is the product of no
-school, the result of no external influence. Michelangelo, the most
-perfect emanation of the Renaissance, came before an astonished world
-like Minerva leaping from the head of Jove, all armed and beautiful
-in her strength and wisdom.
-
-Although he lived in an age when tradition was almost an artistic
-canon, and when the pupil felt in duty bound to follow his master's
-methods, even his early works reveal a singular originality and
-freedom from all imitative tendencies. Take for instance his _Battle
-of the Centaurs and Lapithae_, which he carved when working under
-Bertoldo at the court of Lorenzo the Magnificent: it has nothing in
-common with the school of Donatello, but is instinct with the spirit
-of antique art, showing that the young sculptor derived infinitely
-more profit from the close study of the antique masterpieces which
-Lorenzo had collected in the gardens of San Marco than from
-Bertoldo's precepts. That he succeeded in mastering the style and
-manner of the ancients to perfection is proved by such works as the
-_Sleeping Cupid_, now unfortunately lost, but which was bought by
-Cardinal Riario as an antique, and was the cause of Michelangelo's
-first coming to Rome; the _Bacchus_, hardly inferior to the _Dancing
-Faun of the Capitol_, and the beautiful statues of the Medicean
-tombs, which might easily be mistaken for the work of a Greek chisel.
-
-It is certain that during the first years of his long sojourn in Rome
-he gave himself up enthusiastically to the study of its ancient
-monuments and works of art. When the famous group of the Laocoon was
-discovered in 1506, Michelangelo greeted it as a "miracle of art,"
-affirming that the only statue worthy of being compared with it was
-the torso of Hercules, which he was never tired of drawing, and
-evidently had before his mind when painting the magnificent _ignudi_
-of the Sistine Chapel. In the Wicar Museum at Lille there are
-several copies by Michelangelo of various decorative motives in the
-Baths of Titus, showing how deeply he studied ancient art even in
-minor details. But he was far from being a servile imitator; indeed
-his powerful originality is never so strikingly manifest as in those
-of his masterpieces which appear to be conceived in a purely
-classical spirit.
-
-Although deeply religious, even to the point of regarding his art,
-especially during the latter part of his life, more as a devotional
-exercise than as a stepping-stone to glory, Michelangelo had one
-essential point in common with Pagan artists, namely, a boundless and
-reverent cult for beauty in all its forms, and especially in its
-highest and most wonderful manifestation, the human frame. "He loved
-the beauty of the human body," says Condivi, "as one who best
-understands it, and likewise every beautiful thing--a beautiful
-horse, a beautiful dog, a beautiful country, a beautiful plant, and
-every place and thing beautiful and rare after its kind, admiring
-them all with a marvellous love; thus choosing beauty in nature as
-the bees gather honey from the flowers, and using it afterwards in
-his works." In one of his sonnets Michelangelo thus expressed his
-highest idea of beauty--man created in the image of God:
-
- Nor hath God deigned to show Himself elsewhere
- More clearly than in human forms sublime,
- Which, since they image Him, alone I love.[1]
-
-
-[1] J. A. Symonds, "The Sonnets of Michelangelo and Campanella," n.
-lvi. p. 90.
-
-
-It is certain that he studied anatomy far more deeply than any of his
-contemporaries, not excluding Leonardo da Vinci, and devoted so much
-time to dissecting that "it turned his stomach so that he could
-neither eat nor drink with benefit. Nevertheless," adds Condivi, "he
-did not give up until he was so learned and rich in such knowledge
-that he intended to write a treatise on the movements of the human
-body, its aspect, and concerning the bones, with an ingenious theory
-of his own, devised after long practice."
-
-Michelangelo has been accused by some critics, not wholly without
-reason, of having somewhat ostentatiously availed himself of his
-anatomical knowledge. In some figures of his _Last Judgment_, for
-instance, the muscular masses, the bones and tendons and other
-anatomical details are hardly concealed by the skin, as if he had
-painted from the _subject_ on the dissecting-table rather than from
-the living model. The result is undoubtedly striking and terrible,
-and we may even hazard the conjecture that the master purposely
-exaggerated his efforts in a picture representing the final
-resuscitation of the flesh, the awesome reconstruction and starting
-back into life of bodies long since reduced to dust. This
-"stupendous defect," if such it may be called, is far more apparent
-in Michelangelo's frescoes than in his works of sculpture.
-
-Having taken the human frame as the highest possible standard of
-beauty, Michelangelo made use of it in all his works not only as the
-principal theme, but as a decorative element. The ceiling of the
-Sistine Chapel, with its magnificent nude Athletes and allegorical
-figures, is the apotheosis of the human frame as the noblest means of
-decoration. By introducing nude figures in his tondo of the _Holy
-Family_ and by his powerful but utterly unconventional treatment of
-the angels and saints in the _Last Judgment_, Michelangelo once more
-affirmed his faith in the beauty and purity of the "human form
-divine" as a decorative element of religious art. He went even
-further, for in a letter to Cardinal Ridolfo da Carpi, which he wrote
-when engaged on the construction of St. Peter's, Michelangelo hazards
-the strange theory that the study of the human figure is
-indispensable not only to sculptors and painters, but to architects
-as well: "For it is very certain that the members of architecture
-depend upon the members of man. Who is not a good master of the
-figure, and especially of anatomy, cannot understand it."
-
-Michelangelo's system of working was as powerful and original as his
-art. Before he began a statue he could already discern the finished
-masterpiece lurking within the rough-hewn block of marble, which he
-would attack with reckless assurance, great splinters flying in all
-directions as he feverishly cut away the waste stone, and saw the
-figure spring slowly into life under his magic chisel. A
-contemporary, writing in 1550, when Michelangelo, then seventy-five
-years of age, was carving the _Pietà_ which he intended for his tomb,
-thus describes the master at his work: "I have seen him, although
-over seventy years of age and no longer strong, cut away more
-splinters from a block of very hard marble in fifteen minutes than
-three young men could have done in a couple of hours, and with such
-fierce recklessness that I thought the whole work must fall to
-pieces. For he knocked off splinters the size of a hand, following
-the line of his figures so closely, that the slightest mistake would
-have irreparably spoilt the whole group."
-
-In one of his finest sonnets Michelangelo mentions this wonderful
-gift of the true artist to penetrate dull marble and to perceive, as
-through a veil, the perfect work of art within:
-
- Non ha l' ottimo artista alcun concetto
- Ch' un marmo solo in se' non circoscriva
- Col suo soverchio; e solo a quello arriva
- La mano che ubbidisce all' intelletto.
-
-
-Even such colossal works as the _David_ were carved by Michelangelo
-directly from the marble, without previously modelling a full-size
-clay figure. In none of his finished masterpieces, however, is it
-possible to observe Michelangelo's methods better than in the
-unfinished statue of Saint Matthew, now in the Academy, Florence,
-which, although little more than a rough-hewn block of marble,
-already reveals all the power and beauty of the perfect work of art.
-When quarrying marble at Carrara for the façade of San Lorenzo, he
-could tell to a nicety the exact measurements of the blocks required,
-although he had not yet prepared a model or even accurate drawings to
-guide him in his work. The whole monument was already complete, even
-to its minor details, in his mind.
-
-Michelangelo followed the same strenuous methods in painting. We
-have seen that the first part of his most colossal work, the vault of
-the Sistine Chapel, comprising three hundred and ninety-four figures,
-the majority ten feet high, was begun on May 10th, 1508, and finished
-on November 1st, 1509. Indeed, as Michelangelo may be said to have
-only commenced work in earnest about the beginning of January 1509,
-after dismissing his incapable assistants, it is far more probable
-that the stupendous fresco was painted in two hundred and thirty-four
-days, at the rate of more than one figure a day. The artist could
-only paint on the plaster while it was wet, so that it is easy to
-tell in how many days he finished the larger figures by observing the
-divisions of the separate days' plasterings. For instance, Sir C.
-Holroyd, whose judgment is thoroughly to be depended upon, maintains
-that "one of the largest and most prominent figures, as well as one
-of the finest and most finished, the Adam in the Creation of Man, was
-painted in three sittings only. The lines of the junctions of the
-plaster may be seen in a photograph; one is along the collar bone,
-and one across the junction of the body and the thighs. There is
-also a division all round the figure, an inch or so from the outline,
-so we know that the beautiful and highly finished head and neck were
-painted in one day; the stupendous torso and arms in another; and the
-huge legs, finished in every detail, in a third. Such power of work
-and of finish is utterly inconceivable to any artist of to-day."
-
-Michelangelo rightly attributed his capacity for rapid and finished
-work to the great pains he had taken in thoroughly mastering the
-difficult art of drawing. There is a sketch in the British Museum
-with the following piece of advice in Michelangelo's own hand, to his
-pupil, Antonio Mini:
-
- _Disegna Antonio, disegna Antonio, disegna, e non perder tempo._
- Draw Antonio, draw Antonio, draw, and do not lose time.
-
-[Illustration: CENTRAL GROUP OF THE LAST JUDGEMENT.]
-
-Like Donatello, he used to say to his pupils: "I give you the whole
-art of sculpture when I tell you--_draw_!"
-
-Although it would be difficult to decide whether he excelled most in
-painting or in sculpture, Michelangelo, with singular modesty,
-persisted in regarding himself as exclusively a sculptor. Even when
-engaged on his greatest pictorial works, such as the frescoes of the
-Sistine Chapel, he invariably signed his letters with the words:
-Michelangelo, Scultore. It is, therefore, not surprising that his
-paintings, and more especially his earlier works, were conceived in a
-purely sculptorial spirit, and carried out according to the methods
-of his favourite art. The _Holy Family_, now in the Uffizi, for
-instance, differs but little in treatment and composition, from the
-two marble _tondi_ in the Bargello, and in the Royal Academy, and
-from what we know of the famous _Cartoon of Pisa_, it is evident that
-Michelangelo, when composing that famous masterpiece, was influenced
-by the antique bas-reliefs, representing battle scenes, which he had
-seen and admired during his first visit to Rome.
-
-That he did not consider himself a painter is further shown by his
-utter disregard for colour, so apparent in his earlier paintings,
-such as the _Holy Family_. But in the Sistine Chapel he ceases to
-regard perfection of form as all sufficient, and the sculptor
-suddenly becomes the greatest colour-painter of any age. For in
-these stupendous frescoes, remarkable for their imposing, yet
-extremely simple colour scheme, Michelangelo has succeeded in making
-colour serve a higher purpose than that of merely clothing his
-inspiration with beautiful tints. Colour is no longer an accessory,
-but an integral factor as important as the mighty figures, the inner
-meaning of which it helps to bear out, and the result of as much
-thought and care. In no other work of art has such perfect harmony
-of form and colour ever been attained.
-
-Michelangelo was so entirely absorbed in his art, to the exclusion of
-every other thought or passion, that it is possible to trace in his
-works not only the gradual development of his genius, but also the
-vicissitudes of his long and stormy career. Of his youthful works
-only two, the bas-relief of the _Madonna and Child_ in the Buonarroti
-Collection and the _St. John_ in the Berlin Museum, bear evident
-traces of Donatello's influence; in the _Battle of the Centaurs_ and
-_Lapithae_ the young artist already asserts his powerful
-individuality, and the _Bacchus_ shows how thoroughly he had become
-imbued with the spirit of antique art. It was not until he carved
-the deeply religious group of the _Pietà_ that he revealed his
-spiritual personality, while in the _David_ we are first confronted
-with that _terribilita_ which is the most striking characteristic of
-his subsequent works. All Michelangelo's masterpieces, whether of
-sculpture or painting, are instinct with power and strength, like
-combatants in some fierce, mysterious battle; but whereas the
-youthful David appears to breathe forth a triumphant defiance, his
-later conceptions, such as the brooding athletes of the Sistine
-Chapel, the Louvre captives writhing in their bonds, the sombre
-giants of the Medicean tombs, and the terror-stricken figures of the
-_Last Judgment_, appear to be weighed down and overshadowed by the
-consciousness of inevitable doom. What was formerly a brave,
-fearless fight becomes a hopeless struggle of Titans against Fate.
-
-Sublimity of conception, grandeur of form, and breadth of manner are
-the elements of Michelangelo's style. As painter, as sculptor, as
-architect he attempted--and above any other man succeeded--to unite
-magnificence of plan and endless variety of subordinate parts with
-the utmost simplicity and breadth.
-
-His line is uniformly grand; character and beauty are admitted only
-as far as they can be made subservient to grandeur. The child, the
-female, even meanness and deformity, are by him indiscriminately
-stamped with grandeur. A beggar rises from his hand the patriarch of
-poverty; the hump of his dwarf is impressed with dignity; his women
-are moulds of generations; his infants teem with the man; his men are
-a race of giants. In that sublime circle of the Sistine Chapel which
-exhibits the origin, the progress and the final dispensations of
-theocracy, he may be regarded as the inventor of Epic painting.
-
-Among the glorious titles which have borne the name of Michelangelo
-to so high a pitch of celebrity, the least popular is that derived
-from the composition of his poetical works. The best judges,
-however, regard these productions with profound esteem. For
-Michelangelo lived during the "golden age" of the Lingua Toscana, and
-among the poets who filled the interval between the publication of
-the _Orlando_ and that of the _Aminta_--first, in order of date, of
-the poems of Torquato Tasso--not one has raised himself above, nor,
-perhaps, to the level of Michelangelo.
-
-Michelangelo's architectural works reveal the same characteristics
-which excite our admiration when contemplating his paintings or his
-marbles, namely, simplicity and grandeur. Although he always
-protested that architecture, like painting, was not his profession,
-he stood head and shoulders above Bramante or any other architect of
-his time, and the majestic cupola of the greatest temple in
-Christendom is a sufficient proof of his genius.
-
-Although Michelangelo left no school in the narrower sense of the
-word, his influence upon art, and, what is even more important, on
-the minds of men, has undoubtedly been greater than that of any other
-master, and successive generations will agree with an illustrious
-contemporary, Ariosto, in proclaiming him
-
- Michel, più che mortal, Angel divino.
-
-
-
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-It is difficult to grasp all the sublime significance of
-Michelangelo's works, even when we find ourselves face to face with
-the actual masterpieces, such as the frescoes of the Sistine Chapel
-or the beautiful statues which adorn the Medicean tombs.
-
-To attempt an accurate description of his principal works within the
-narrow limits at our disposal would be indeed a hopeless task,
-especially as the size of these pictures will only allow of their
-conveying a somewhat remote idea of the grandeur and awe-inspiring
-dignity which are the principal characteristics of Michelangelo's art.
-
-In selecting the following eight illustrations, we have endeavoured
-not only to give an idea of Michelangelo's gradual artistic
-development, but also to throw some light on his powerful and most
-interesting personality. Although the _Portrait_ now in the Capitol
-Museum is in many respects inferior to the one in the Uffizi, and has
-even fewer claims to the honour of being regarded as by the master's
-own hand, we have selected it because it tallies perfectly with the
-descriptions which Michelangelo's contemporaries, and more especially
-Condivi and Vasari, have left us of the master's rugged and
-expressive features. There is an aspect of profound melancholy,
-almost of discouragement, in the wan face, disfigured by the
-flattened nose; the eyes are sunk deep under the massive and somewhat
-slanting brow, and the whole picture has an indescribably mournful,
-hopeless expression. It was probably painted when Michelangelo was
-about fifty-five years of age, and the tragedy of the tomb was
-causing him bitter grief and disappointment. In the Uffizi portrait
-the most interesting feature is the hand, strangely resembling an
-eagle's talon and immediately giving the impression of strong
-individuality and creative power, which were Michelangelo's most
-striking characteristics.
-
-
-It has been rightly observed that nothing closes the fifteenth
-century so fitly as the magnificent marble group of _The Pietà_,
-which, although carved by Michelangelo in 1498, already prophesied
-the power of sixteenth-century art. Numerous other artists had
-already been attracted by the pathetic theme of the Virgin Mother
-mourning over her dead Son, their principal aim, however, being
-almost invariably to convey as forcibly as possible to the beholder
-the grief and despair of the bereaved Mother. With characteristic
-originality Michelangelo departed from the traditional manner,
-successfully endeavouring to give the theme a simpler but far more
-dignified and lofty interpretation. The Madonna is seated on the
-stone upon which the Cross is erected, with her dead Son on her lap.
-Her beautiful face is not contracted with grief, but wears an
-expression of sublime peace and resignation, and the graceful head
-reclines slightly on her right shoulder, as if pitying Heaven had
-sent sleep to temper the extremity of her grief, and sweet dreams of
-the past, when the Virgin Mother fondled her Infant Son, had
-mercifully cancelled the horrible vision of the Redeemer's lifeless
-body now lying on her lap.
-
-Michelangelo's contemporaries criticised the figure of the Madonna,
-remarking that the Mother is far too young compared with the Son.
-"One day," writes Condivi, "as I was talking to Michelangelo of this
-objection, 'Do you not know,' he said, 'that chaste women retain
-their fresh looks much longer than those who are not chaste? And I
-tell you, moreover, that such freshness and flower of youth, besides
-being maintained in her by natural causes, it may possibly be that it
-was ordained by the Divine Power to prove to the world the virginity
-and perpetual purity of the Mother. It was not necessary in the Son,
-but rather the contrary, wishing to show that the Son of God took
-upon himself a true human body subject to all the ills of man,
-excepting only sin. Do not wonder then that I have, for all these
-reasons, made the most Holy Virgin, Mother of God, a great deal
-younger in comparison with her Son than she is usually represented.
-To the Son I have allotted His full age.'" This grave theological
-statement gives us an interesting insight into Michelangelo's pious
-and meditative character, showing how earnestly he took his art and
-how reverently he thought out every detail, especially when
-interpreting some religious theme.
-
-The figure of the dead Redeemer is, if possible, even more admirable
-than that of the Mother. "He is of so great and so rare a beauty,"
-exclaims Condivi, "that no one beholds it but is moved to pity. A
-figure truly worthy of the humanity which belonged to the Son of
-God." No other sculptor has ever succeeded in giving marble the
-absolute _abandon_ of death quite so pathetically as Michelangelo has
-done in this _Dead Christ_. Here it was that his profound knowledge
-of anatomy, and the long hours spent over the dissecting table at
-Santo Spirito, first stood him in good stead. In the Albertina
-Gallery at Vienna there is a magnificent study of a subject placed in
-almost exactly the same position as the Dead Christ, which the
-sculptor evidently transferred to _The Pietà_, if indeed he did not
-make the sketch expressly for this group. Although Michelangelo
-always professed to be a sculptor and nothing else, he shows all a
-true painter's sensitive appreciation of light and shade in this
-work, having so arranged the graceful, but somewhat complicated folds
-of the Madonna's draperies, as to form a comparatively dark
-background which enhances the whiteness of the lifeless body lying on
-her lap.
-
-To students of Michelangelo's art this work is especially interesting
-as it shows the master equally free from the influence of his
-Florentine predecessors, and from that of the antique. Michelangelo
-was conscious of the merit and of the originality of this group, for
-it is the only one which he considered worthy of bearing his great
-name.
-
-[Illustration: THE PIETÀ.]
-
-The _David_, now in the Accademia at Florence, inaugurates the series
-of Michelangelo's colossal statues. It will be remembered that the
-master undertook to utilize a huge block of marble already rough-hewn
-by an unskilful sculptor, and that he succeeded in hewing this
-magnificent statue, without adding any other piece at all, so exactly
-to the size that the old surface of the marble may still be seen on
-the top of the head and in the base. What most surprises the modern
-artist when studying not only this, but all Michelangelo's colossal
-works, both in painting and in sculpture, is the perfect finish of
-every detail. The fearless eyes, the shapely ear, the firm set
-mouth, the powerful hand nervously grasping the death-dealing
-missile, could not have been more carefully modelled in a statuette,
-and casts of each individual limb are still set before students to
-copy and admire in every studio of the world.
-
-In 1501, when Michelangelo began this work, he was still free and
-unfettered, justly proud of the fame which his _Pietà_ had brought
-him, and with the world literally at his feet. This young giant
-boldly taking aim at an unknown but formidable enemy, might well be
-regarded as an allegorical representation of the artist himself, on
-the eve of grappling with his fate. It may be taken for certain that
-a quarter of a century later he would have interpreted the same theme
-very differently, and would perhaps have given us David the King, or
-David the Psalmist and the Prophet, instead of this magnificent
-embodiment of conscious power and hope. The fierce frown, the
-expression of strenuous force victoriously struggling against
-overwhelming odds, all those characteristics, in short, which have
-been summed up in the word _terribilità_ by his contemporaries, would
-have been replaced by the sombre majesty of the _Moses_, or the
-despairing expression of conquered, impotent strength which is the
-key-note to such works as the Medicean Tombs, the Louvre Captives,
-and the _Last Judgment_. Critics casting about for an artistic
-derivation of Michelangelo's earlier works maintain that the
-_David's_ face bears a resemblance to the features of Donatello's
-Saint George in Or San Michele, but the type is far more virile and
-energetic, recalling, if anything, the masterpieces of ancient art.
-
-
-The _tondo_ representing _The Holy Family_, now in the Tribuna of the
-Uffizi, is doubly interesting as a work of art and as an instance of
-Michelangelo's fearless originality. It was painted about the year
-1503 for that Florentine merchant prince, Angelo Doni, who sat for
-his portrait to the divine Raphael. Although Signorelli had once
-before introduced nude figures as a decorative element in a Madonna
-and Child which he painted for Lorenzo de' Medici (and it is possible
-that Michelangelo saw this picture), no other artist of the
-Renaissance had ever dared to interpret a sacred subject such as the
-Holy Family in so Pagan a spirit. An ancient Greek would quite
-naturally have supposed the beautiful group in the foreground to
-represent Juno playing with the infant Bacchus, only wondering,
-perhaps, why the artist had neglected to place a garland of vine
-leaves and clustering grapes round the Wine God's curly head. St.
-Joseph might easily be taken for a momentarily uxorious Jupiter or
-for a sober Silenus, and the nude shepherds idling in the background
-place the scene in a pleasant corner of Arcadia, while a grinning
-little Faun does duty for St. John the Baptist.
-
-Nevertheless there is not the slightest hint at irreverence; it is
-merely a Pagan translation, by a master hand, of an oft-repeated
-Christian theme, a transposition as beautiful and as harmonious in
-its way as the original score. Indeed, Vasari tells us that
-Michelangelo painted this strikingly original _tondo_ merely "to show
-his skill," and the magnificent modelling and foreshortening of the
-Madonna's arms, the masterful composition, and the wonderfully
-accurate drawing more than achieve his object. As to the colouring,
-he entirely disregarded it in his sculptor's pride. He might as well
-have carved this remarkable work in marble. Before painting the
-ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo appeared to be wilfully
-colour-blind, as if afraid that painting would wile him away from the
-sister art, to which he had plighted his troth.
-
-
-There is very little doubt that the original design of the _Creation
-of Man_ was inspired in Michelangelo by one of the antique gems which
-he admired as a boy in Lorenzo de' Medici's collection. A similar
-origin may be assigned to the group of Judith and her maid, also in
-the Sistine Chapel, to several of the Athletes, and to the Leda and
-the Swan which he painted for the Duke of Ferrara. But this
-magnificent recumbent figure of Adam far surpasses anything in
-ancient as well as in modern art, and is indeed a worthy centre round
-which the remaining stupendous compositions appear to gravitate like
-planets round the sun. It is here, more than in any other of his
-works, that we can appreciate Michelangelo's wonderful gift of
-interpreting the highest and most inaccessible themes in a simple yet
-imposing manner. Resting heavily on the curved surface of the globe,
-his powerful limbs and finely modelled flesh clearly outlined against
-the indigo blue of the sky and the solemn lines of the landscape,
-Adam gives one the impression of a huge primeval being instinct with
-strength which he is as yet unable to understand or to use, and just
-awaking into life, a divine spark of which he receives from the
-Deity. Michelangelo's conception of God the Father, as an old but
-powerful and majestic figure, has ever since remained the only
-possible pictorial symbol of so lofty a subject.
-
-[Illustration: THE HOLY FAMILY.]
-
-
-Apart from its great artistic merit, a pathetic interest attaches to
-the statue of _Moses_ because it represents the last act of that
-tragedy of the tomb which darkened the greater part of Michelangelo's
-life, and influenced his art more than any other circumstance of his
-eventful career.
-
-The leader and law-giver of the Hebrews is seated in an attitude of
-thought and wisdom, holding under his right arm the tables of the
-law, and supporting his chin with his left hand, like one tired and
-full of cares. His beard escapes in long waves between the fingers
-of his right hand. The hands and strong bare arms of the _Moses_ are
-magnificent, beyond comparison the finest ever modelled by
-Michelangelo. The expression of the face is one of commanding power
-and almost fierce energy, a face capable of inspiring terror rather
-than love, a veritable embodiment of the cruel, uncompromising Hebrew
-legislation. The powerful, massive form is clearly apparent beneath
-the beautiful folds of the draperies, for here, as in all
-Michelangelo's clothed figures, whether in painting or in sculpture,
-dress does not hide but almost enhances the shape and beauty of the
-body. "This statue alone," exclaimed the Cardinal of Mantua, when he
-saw the finished work, "is enough to honour the memory of Pope
-Julius."
-
-[Illustration: THE MOSES.]
-
-
-In the Medicean tombs Michelangelo may be said to have equalled if
-not surpassed the masterpieces of ancient sculpture. We have
-selected the tomb of Lorenzo de' Medici for our illustration, as the
-statues which adorn it, symbolizing _Evening_ and _Dawn_, although
-conceived in the same spirit of profound melancholy, are, if
-possible, even more beautiful than the Day and Night of Giuliano's
-tomb. _Evening_ is represented by an old man, brooding and dejected,
-but hardly less powerful and muscular than the giant Day. It is
-evident that he is not suffering from bodily fatigue, but that he is
-sinking under the weight of some unbearable, irremediable calamity.
-
-The virgin _Dawn_ is perhaps the most beautiful female figure of
-modern or of ancient art. She is represented as only half awake and
-almost unable to rise from her couch, while there is a suggestion of
-ineffable bitterness in the expression of the face with its
-half-closed eyes wearily greeting another day of sorrow. The
-powerful yet graceful limbs are magnificently modelled, and the whole
-figure may be regarded as the perfection of the female form, redeemed
-from any breath of sensuality by a commanding loftiness of
-expression, such as the Greeks gave to the statues of their goddesses.
-
-
-Michelangelo's _Last Judgment_ is a work of so colossal a nature that
-it would be impossible to give even a remote idea of the whole
-composition in this unpretentious little book. We have therefore
-selected for our illustration the central group representing Christ
-the Judge, a dread figure enthroned on clouds, with hand upraised in
-an attitude of stern command, surrounded by the Blessed, who press
-round the Son of God with eager, frightened looks and gestures, as if
-hardly secure of their final salvation in that terrible day of
-retribution, "cum vix Justus sit securus." Nestling timorously close
-to her Son, half sitting, half crouching, with head averted, as if to
-avoid seeing the coming wrath, and arms crossed on her bosom, is the
-Mother of God, a wonderfully sweet and pathetic figure, full of pity
-and sorrow for the condemned souls, and contrasting strangely with
-the inexorable Judge rising in his stern majesty to pronounce
-sentence on the frightened, shuddering mass of humanity. The action
-of the Judge, and indeed every part of the composition, forcibly
-remind us of the _Last Judgment_ in the Campo Santo of Pisa, but
-there is not a figure or a detail in the whole of this colossal work
-which does not bear the imprint of that powerful originality and that
-wonderful gift to express the most varied emotion and to interpret
-the loftiest themes, which were the principal characteristics of
-Michelangelo's genius.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF CHIEF WORKS
-
-
-AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
-
-VIENNA, ALBERTINA GALLERY.
-
- Several drawings and sketches.
-
-
-BELGIUM
-
-BRUGES, CHURCH OF ST. BAVON.
-
- Marble group of Virgin and Child. (Executed
- at Carrara in 1506 for two Flemish merchants.)
-
-
-BRITISH ISLES
-
-LONDON, NATIONAL GALLERY.
-
- No. 790, Entombment. Unfinished painting on
- wood. (Between 1501-1504.)
-
-ROYAL ACADEMY, DIPLOMA GALLERY.
-
- Madonna and Child. Tondo bas-relief (1501-1504).
-
-LONDON, BRITISH MUSEUM.
-
- Several drawings.
-
-OXFORD, TAYLOR COLLECTION.
-
- Drawings.
-
-
-FRANCE
-
-PARIS, LOUVRE.
-
- Two colossal statues of Captives, originally
- intended for the tomb of Julius II. (1513).
-
- Numerous drawings, including Head of Faun.
-
-LILLE, MUSÉE WICAR.
-
- Drawings.
-
-
-GERMANY
-
-BERLIN MUSEUM.
-
- Statue of youthful St. John the Baptist (about 1495).
-
-WEIMAR MUSEUM.
-
- Drawings and studies for the Last Judgment.
-
-
-HOLLAND
-
-HAARLEM, TEYLER MUSEUM.
-
- Many important drawings.
-
-
-ITALY
-
-BOLOGNA, CHURCH OF SAN DOMENICO.
-
- Statue of kneeling Angel (1494).
-
-FLORENCE, ACCADEMIA.
-
- Colossal statue of David (1501-1504).
-
- Statue of St. Matthew (unfinished).
-
-BUONARROTI COLLECTION.
-
- Madonna and Child (bas-relief), 1489-1492.
-
- Fight between Centaurs and Lapithae (bas-relief), 1489-1492.
-
- Numerous sketches, studies, architectural drawings
- and three hundred autograph letters.
-
-DUOMO.
-
- Unfinished group representing "The Deposition from the Cross."
-
-MUSEO NAZIONALE.
-
- Statue of Bacchus (executed in 1497 for
- Jacopo Galli).
-
- Dying Adonis (1501-1504).
-
- Apollo (unfinished statue, executed in 1530
- for Baccio Valori).
-
- Victory (group intended for Julius II.'s Tomb,
- 1521).
-
- Bust of Brutus (1544?).
-
-CHURCH OF SAN LORENZO.
-
- Medicean Tombs (begun 1521).
-
- New Sacristy and Library of San Lorenzo.
-
-UFFIZI GALLERY.
-
- The Holy Family (tondo in oil-colours, painted
- for Angelo Doni in 1503).
-
- Numerous drawings, including _The Resurrection
- of Lazarus_, _Prudence_, the _Last Judgment_.
-
-BOBOLI GARDENS.
-
- Four Slaves (unfinished statues).
-
-ROME, ST. PETER'S.
-
- Group of La Pietà (1499).
-
-CHURCH OF SANTA MARIA SOPRA MINERVA.
-
- Statue of the Saviour (1521).
-
-CHURCH OF SAN PIETRO IN VINCOLI.
-
- Tomb of Julius II. and statue of Moses (completed 1545).
-
-VATICAN, SISTINE CHAPEL.
-
- The Creation and Fall of Man (1508-1512). }
- } Frescos.
- The Last Judgment (1535-1541). }
-
-PAULINE CHAPEL.
-
- The Conversion of St. Paul. } Frescoes
- } (1542-49).
- The Martyrdom of St. Peter. }
-
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Michelangelo, by Edward C. Strutt</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Michelangelo</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Edward C. Strutt</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 6, 2022 [eBook #69303]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MICHELANGELO ***</div>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-front"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="THE DAVID.">
-<br>
-THE DAVID.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters<br>
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br><br>
- MICHELANGELO<br>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- BY<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- EDWARD C. STRUTT<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br>
- GEORGE BELL & SONS<br>
- 1908<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- First Published, January, 1904.<br>
- Reprinted, 1908.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap01">SOME BOOKS ABOUT MICHELANGELO</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap02">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap03">CHRONOLOGY OF THE ARTIST'S LIFE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap04">LIFE OF MICHELANGELO</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap05">THE ART OF MICHELANGELO</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap06">OUR ILLUSTRATIONS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<a href="#chap07">LIST OF THE ARTIST'S CHIEF WORKS IN PUBLIC GALLERIES</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-SOME BOOKS ABOUT MICHELANGELO
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Carte Michelangiolescheinedite." Milano, 1865.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Vita di Michelangelo Buonarroti," by A. Condivi. Pisa, 1823.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michelangelo," by H. Knackfuss. Berlin, 1895.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michel Ange," by E. Ollivier. Paris, 1892.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"The Lives and Works of Michelangelo and
-Raphael," by Quatremere de Quincy.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michelangelo," by L. von Scheffler. 1892.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michelangiolo in Rom, 1508-1512," by A. Springer.
-Leipzig, 1875.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Life and works of M. A. Buonarroti," by Charles
-Heath Wilson. London, 1876.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Life of Michelangelo Buonarroti," by John
-Addington Symonds. London, 1893.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michelangelo Buonarroti," by Sir Charles Holroyd. London, 1903.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"An account of the drawings by Raphael and
-Michelangelo in the University Galleries of
-Oxford," by Sir J. C. Robinson.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-"Michael Angelo," by Lord Ronald Sutherland
-Gower. London, 1903.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">THE DAVID</a> <i>Accademia, Florence, Frontispiece</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-016">PORTRAIT OF MICHELANGELO</a> <i>Uffizi Gallery, Florence</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-038">THE CREATION OF MAN</a> <i>Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-050">TOMB OF LORENZO DE' MEDICI</a> <i>New Sacristy, San Lorenzo, Florence</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-074">CENTRAL GROUP OF THE LAST JUDGMENT</a> <i>Sistine Chapel, Vatican, Rome</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-084">THE MADONNA DELLA PIETÀ</a> <i>St. Peter's, Rome</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-088">THE HOLY FAMILY</a> <i>Uffizi Gallery, Florence</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-090">THE MOSES</a> <i>San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome</i>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHRONOLOGY OF MICHELANGELO'S LIFE
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1475. Born at Caprese.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1488. Is apprenticed to Domenico Ghirlandajo.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1489-92. Studies sculpture under the patronage
-of Lorenzo il Magnifico.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1504. Enters into competition with Leonardo da Vinci.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1505. Goes to Rome at the invitation of Pope
-Julius II.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1508. Begins painting ceiling of Sistine Chapel.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1512. Completes it.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1521. Commences Medicean Tombs in San Lorenzo.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1529. Fortifies Florence against Charles V.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1535-41. Paints Last Judgment.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1547. Begins building Cupola of St. Peter's.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-1564. Dies in Rome.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE LIFE OF MICHELANGELO
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In the quaintly written diary of Messer
-Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, a well-to-do Florentine
-citizen, the following entry, dated March 6th,
-1475, may still be found: "To-day there was born
-unto me a male child, whom I have named
-Michelagnolo.[<a id="chap04fn1text"></a><a href="#chap04fn1">1</a>] He saw the light at Caprese,
-whereof I am Podestà, on Monday morning, 6th
-March, between four and five o'clock, and on
-the 8th of the same month he was baptized in
-the church of San Giovanni." Messer Lodovico
-had been appointed <i>Podestà</i>, or Governor, of
-Chiusi and Caprese in the Casentino by Lorenzo
-de Medici only a few months before penning this
-memorandum, so that, by a strange caprice of
-fate, it was here, in the little town overshadowed
-by the rugged Sasso della Verna, hallowed by
-the ecstatic visions of St. Francis of Assisi, and
-not in Florence, in the Athens of the Italian
-Renaissance, where resurrected Paganism ran
-riot and triumphed, that the longest and most
-glorious career in the history of art and of human
-endeavour began.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap04fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap04fn1text">1</a>] This is the archaic form of <i>angelo</i>. The name is also
-sometimes spelt <i>Michelangiolo</i>, but I have thought it
-advisable to adopt the modern and more generally accepted
-<i>Michelangelo</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Vasari and Condivi, Michelangelo's pupils and
-enthusiastic biographers, maintain that the
-Buonarroti family was closely related to the great
-house of the Counts of Canossa, a conviction
-fully shared, curiously enough, by the artist
-himself, who rather prided himself on his aristocratic
-connection. But recent genealogical researches
-have proved beyond all doubt that, although of
-gentle birth (both his father and his mother,
-Madonna Francesca di Miniato Del Sera, coming of
-ancient Florentine stock), Michelangelo could
-not in reality lay claim to even distant ties of
-kinship with the Canossa family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the expiration of his term of office as
-Podestà of Caprese, which extended little over a
-year, Messer Lodovico returned with his family
-to Settignano, the picturesque little village built
-on a vine-clad slope overlooking Florence, where,
-in an old-fashioned mansion nestling among olive
-trees and surrounded by a well-cultivated <i>podere</i>,
-many generations of the Buonarroti had lived
-and died. Before leaving Caprese, however, the
-proud father had the child's horoscope cast, and
-greatly did he rejoice when the astrologer
-announced that a singularly lucky combination of
-the planets had presided over the birth of his
-boy, who was destined "to perform wonders
-with his mind and with his hands," a prophecy
-which was amply fulfilled.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-FIRST FLORENTINE PERIOD
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The removal of the Buonarroti family to
-Settignano, the little village almost exclusively
-inhabited by stonemasons and workers in marble,
-exercised a most decisive influence on the child's
-future career. Indeed, Michelangelo himself used
-to say half jestingly, that as he had been given
-out to nurse to a stonemason's wife, the mania
-for sculpture must have entered his blood together
-with the milk which he had sucked as a babe. A
-mallet and a chisel and bits of marble were the only
-toys that the infant Michelangelo cared for, and it
-is recorded of him that when he grew up to be a
-sturdy boy of ten he could use his tools almost
-as skilfully as his foster-father himself. He soon
-became more ambitious, and would pass whole
-hours with chalk and charcoal, trying to copy the
-marble figures and ornaments plentifully strewn
-about.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For it was a busy time at Settignano, whose
-hundreds of stone-carvers were hardly able to cope
-with the numerous commissions which poured
-in upon them from the merchant princes of
-Florence, anxious to rival Lorenzo the
-Magnificent in the building and decoration of
-splendid palaces. A spirited drawing of a faun by
-Michelangelo's boyish hand may still be seen on
-a wall of the Buonarroti Villa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Messer Lodovico did everything in his power
-to discourage these marked artistic tendencies,
-and in order the better to uproot what he regarded
-as a worthless inclination, he sent the boy to a
-grammar-school in Florence, away from the
-dangerous <i>milieu</i> of Settignano, with its
-unceasing din of hammer and chisel on reverberating
-marble, which was sweet music to Michelangelo's
-ear. But although Maestro Francesco da Urbino,
-to whose care Messer Lodovico had entrusted
-his son, frequently had recourse to the most
-persuasive and forcible arguments, they were entirely
-lost on young Michelangelo, who had instinctively
-drifted into the company of the garzoni and pupils
-of leading Florentine artists, and sadly neglected
-his books in order to devote himself with growing
-enthusiasm to the study of art.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amongst his new friends was Francesco Granacci,
-a pupil of Domenico Ghirlandajo, who often
-lent him drawings to copy, and took him to his
-master's <i>bottega</i> whenever any work was going
-forward from which he might learn. "So
-powerfully," says Condivi, "did these sights move
-Michelangelo, that he altogether abandoned
-letters; so that his father, who held art in
-contempt, often beat him severely for it." But it soon
-became apparent that blows and persuasion were
-equally unavailing, and Messer Lodovico finally
-gave up the hopeless struggle, apprenticing his
-thirteen-year-old son on April 1st, 1488, to
-Domenico and David Ghirlandajo, reputed the best
-painters of the time in Florence. Although a
-mere child, Michelangelo was evidently already
-able to make himself useful in the studio, for
-instead of paying a certain sum for his apprenticeship,
-as was usually the case, it was stipulated
-that he should receive twenty-four florins, about
-£8 12<i>s.</i>, during the three years of its duration.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's first picture was a strikingly
-faithful copy of Martin Schongauer's famous
-<i>Temptation of St. Antony</i>, which he painted with
-a realistic force considered wonderful for a child
-of his age. A number of anecdotes illustrative of
-the precocity of the boy's genius, are related by
-Condivi and by Vasari. "Michelangelo," says
-the latter, "grew in power and character so
-rapidly that Domenico was astonished seeing him
-do things quite extraordinary in a youth, for he
-not only surpassed the other students, but often
-equalled the work done by his master. It
-happened that Domenico was working in the great
-chapel of Santa Maria Novella, and one day when
-he was out Michelangelo set himself to draw from
-nature the scaffolding, the tables with all the
-materials of the art, and some of the young men
-at work. Presently Domenico returned, and saw
-Michelangelo's drawing. He was astonished,
-saying 'this boy knows more than I do;' and he
-was stupefied by this style and new realism; 'a
-gift from heaven to a child of such tender years.'"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo derived very little advantage
-from his apprenticeship to Domenico Ghirlandajo,
-who was actually jealous of his pupil and
-gave him little or no assistance in his studies. He
-may have picked up some practical knowledge,
-however, transferring cartoons for his master in
-the church of Santa Maria Novella, painting
-draperies and ornaments, mixing colours for
-fresco painting, and generally fulfilling the rather
-menial duties which fell to the lot of an artist's
-apprentice in those days. The boy had no fixed
-plan or method of study, but devoted himself
-principally to drawing, in which he soon acquired
-a boldness and security of line never attained by
-his master, whose faulty cartoons Michelangelo
-often had the courage to correct.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in the gardens of the Medici at San
-Marco, where Lorenzo the Magnificent had collected
-many antique statues and decorative sculptures,
-that Michelangelo finally discovered his real
-artistic vocation, and here he would spend many
-hours every day, assimilating the Hellenic spirit
-which emanated from the masterpieces before him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lorenzo's principal object in establishing a
-museum of antique sculpture at San Marco had
-been to raise Florentine sculpture from the state
-of comparative neglect into which it had fallen
-since the death of Donatello. He therefore
-appointed one Bertoldo, who had been foreman
-of Donatello's workshop, keeper of the collection,
-with a special commission to encourage and
-instruct the young men who studied there. But
-there was evidently a great lack of students, for
-Lorenzo had recourse to Domenico Ghirlandajo,
-requesting him to select from his pupils those he
-considered the most promising, and send them
-to work in the garden of San Marco. Domenico,
-nothing loth to get rid of his two most ambitious
-apprentices, selected Francesco Granacci and
-Michelangelo, and it was thus that the latter
-came under the influence of Donatello's school.
-Of Bertoldo, who must be considered Michelangelo's
-first instructor in the art of sculpture,
-and who doubtless had a great share in shaping
-his genius, very little is known beyond Vasari's
-statement that "although he was old and could
-not work, he was none the less an able and
-highly reputed artist." The magnificent pulpits
-of San Lorenzo, begun by Donatello and completed
-by Bertoldo, amply suffice to confirm
-Vasari's eulogistic estimate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under such a master Michelangelo made rapid
-progress, and by his first attempt at sculpture, a
-mask of a grinning Faun, attracted the attention
-of Lorenzo the Magnificent, who took the keenest
-interest in the art school which he had founded.
-So struck was Lorenzo with the boy's genius, that
-he prevailed upon Messer Lodovico, not without
-the greatest difficulty, to entrust the talented young
-sculptor to his care. Vasari tells us that "he
-gave Michelangelo a good room in his own house
-with all that he needed, treating him like a son,
-with a seat at his table, which was frequented
-every day by noblemen and men of great importance."
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-016"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-016.jpg" alt="PORTRAIT OF MICHELANGELO.">
-<br>
-PORTRAIT OF MICHELANGELO.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's daily companions at this
-hospitable board were such men as Pico della
-Mirandola, surnamed "the prince of wisdom,"
-Marsilio Ficino, the expounder of Plato, and the
-poets Luigi Pulci and Angelo Poliziano. It was
-the latter who suggested the subject of Michelangelo's
-first important work, a bas-relief, now in
-the Casa Buonarroti, representing the <i>Battle of
-the Centaurs and Lapithae</i>. It is a singularly
-powerful composition, conceived and carried out
-with a freedom and originality little short of
-miraculous in a boy of fifteen. The struggling
-groups of combatants, instinct with life and
-energy, the masterful treatment of anatomical
-problems, and the already profound knowledge
-of the human frame, reveal the future author of
-the <i>Last Judgment</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo himself, when at the height of
-his artistic greatness, used to say that he had
-never quite fulfilled the splendid promise
-contained in this youthful work of his. Apart from
-its intrinsic merit, this bas-relief is interesting as
-illustrating Michelangelo's complete independence
-from the school and methods of Donatello.
-His bold and original genius had sought inspiration
-directly from the antique, and the <i>Battle of
-the Centaurs and Lapithae</i> might easily be taken
-for a fragment from some Roman sarcophagus.
-In view of these very pronounced characteristics,
-it is difficult to understand why another
-bas-relief, also in the Casa Buonarroti, representing
-a seated Madonna with the Infant Jesus, and
-chiefly notable for its almost servile imitation of
-Donatello's manner, should be ascribed by most
-critics to this same period. Indeed, the
-execution and design of this <i>Madonna and Child</i> are
-so inferior as to render it a work of extremely
-doubtful authenticity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although he applied himself principally to the
-study of sculpture, Michelangelo continued to
-devote many hours every day to drawing, and, like
-most young artists of his age, he drew and studied
-assiduously in the Brancacci Chapel of the
-Church of the Carmine, containing the famous
-frescoes of Masaccio and his followers. Conscious
-of his own superiority, Michelangelo was,
-it appears, in the habit of frankly criticizing the
-work of his fellow-students in the Brancacci
-Chapel, and one of these, named Piero Torrigiani,
-a brutal and proud fellow, got so angry
-one day that he hit Michelangelo a formidable
-blow on the nose, breaking the cartilage and
-disfiguring his critic for life. For this act of temper
-Torrigiani was banished from Florence, but it is
-pleasant to know that Michelangelo successfully
-interceded with Lorenzo on behalf of the man
-who had assaulted him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo had just completed the <i>Battle
-of the Centaurs and Lapithae</i> when he lost his
-best friend and munificent patron, to whom he
-had become deeply attached. On April 8th, 1492,
-Lorenzo the Magnificent died at Careggi, sincerely
-mourned, not only in Florence, but throughout
-Italy. The generous encouragement which
-he gave to art and letters, the power and
-splendour which he bestowed on Florence in exchange
-for her lost liberty, more as an infatuated lover
-dowering a wayward bride than as a conqueror
-imposing his will, the consummate ability
-displayed in his diplomatic dealings with the other
-Italian States, these were the principal merits
-which justified the proud title of <i>Il Magnifico</i>,
-conferred on him by his contemporaries, and
-which caused Lorenzo's death to be regarded as
-a public calamity throughout Italy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So much grief, says Condivi, did Michelangelo
-feel for his patron's death, that for some time he
-was quite unable to work. He left the Medicean
-palace, which had been his home during three
-years, and returned to his father's house. But
-his love for art was stronger than his grief, and
-after a few weeks, when he was himself again,
-he bought a large piece of marble that had for
-many years been exposed to the wind and rain,
-and carved a Hercules out of it. This statue
-was placed in the Strozzi Palace, where it stood
-until the siege of Florence in 1530, when Giovanni
-Battista della Palla bought it and sent it
-into France as a gift to King Francis I. It has
-unfortunately been lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At this time Michelangelo applied himself
-most diligently to the study of anatomy, a
-profound knowledge of which is apparent in all his
-subsequent works. He was indebted to the Prior
-of Santo Spirito for many kindnesses, amongst
-others for the use of a room where he dissected
-the subjects, for the most part executed criminals,
-which the Prior placed at his disposal. "Nothing,"
-says Condivi, "could have given Michelangelo
-more pleasure, and this was the beginning
-of his anatomical studies, which he followed
-until he had completely mastered the secrets of
-the human frame."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is surprising that artists of the Cinquecento
-should have enjoyed privileges for practically
-studying anatomy which were denied to
-physicians. When the famous Dr. Hunter saw
-Leonardo da Vinci's anatomical drawings and their
-descriptions, preserved in the library of George
-III., he discovered with astonishment that the
-artist had been a deep student, "and was at that
-time the best anatomist in the world." Michelangelo,
-as Vasari tells us, "dissected many dead
-bodies, zealously studying anatomy," whereas
-Cortesius, professor of anatomy at Bologna, who
-wrote a century later, complains that he was
-prevented finishing a treatise on "Practical
-Anatomy" in consequence of having only been able
-twice to dissect a human body in the course of
-twenty-four years. To please his friend the Prior,
-Michelangelo carved a crucifix in wood, a little
-under life size, which was placed over the high
-altar of the church of Santo Spirito, but which
-has since been lost.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Piero de' Medici, the Magnifico's son and
-successor, had inherited none of his father's
-brilliant qualities. He was proud and insolent,
-and his coarse tastes and manners soon lost him
-that popularity which had been Lorenzo's
-stepping-stone to greatness. Michelangelo, who had
-been his companion as a boy, and whom he
-persuaded to accept his hospitality, was ill at ease
-in the house of a Prince who could so far insult
-the sensitive artist as to boast that he had two
-remarkable men in his establishment, Michelangelo
-and a certain Spanish groom remarkable
-for his athletic prowess, thus placing both on the
-same level.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Too proud to tolerate such treatment, and
-foreseeing Piero's approaching fall, Michelangelo
-left Florence early in the year 1494 and went
-first to Venice, where he failed to find
-employment, and thence to Bologna. Here he was
-hospitably received by a gentleman named
-Messer Gian Francesco Aldovrandi, who not only
-paid a fine of fifty Bolognese lire to which the
-impecunious young sculptor had been condemned
-for having neglected to provide himself
-with a passport, but invited him to his house and
-honoured him highly, "delighting in his genius,
-and every evening he made him read something
-from Dante or from Petrarca, or now and then
-from Boccaccio, until he fell asleep."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While staying with Aldovrandi, and thanks to
-his recommendation, Michelangelo completed an
-unfinished statue of San Petronio in the church of
-San Domenico and carved a statuette of a kneeling
-angel holding a candlestick for the arca or
-shrine of the saint, begun by Nicolò di Bari. It
-is a beautiful and highly finished work, which
-was greatly admired and for which he received
-thirty ducats. His success aroused the fierce
-jealousy of the Bolognese sculptors, and it was
-under fear of personal violence from the native
-craftsmen, who accused him of taking the bread
-out of their mouths, that Michelangelo hastily
-left Bologna in the spring of 1495 and returned
-to Florence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In November of the preceding year Piero de'
-Medici had had to fly from the city over whose
-destinies he was so unfit to preside, and when
-Michelangelo returned to Florence he found that
-Savonarola had established a popular government.
-The fiery Dominican, with his inspired
-eloquence, his ascetic fervour and an energy
-bordering upon violence, was exactly a man after
-Michelangelo's heart, and Savonarola's
-impassioned and gloomy appeals made an indelible
-impression upon him. The <i>Last Judgment</i> in the
-Sistine Chapel might almost be regarded as a
-pictorial rendering of one of the terrible frate's
-sermons.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although only twenty years of age, Michelangelo,
-of whom it has been said "that he was
-never young," was made a member of the General
-Council of Citizens. But his political duties did
-not take up much of his time, for to this period
-must be ascribed the statue of a youthful
-St. John the Baptist, executed for Lorenzo di Pier
-Francesco, a cousin of the exiled Medici, and
-now in the Berlin Museum. It is a charming but
-somewhat effeminate figure, differing strangely
-from the powerful and rugged style to which we
-are accustomed in Michelangelo's works. Lorenzo,
-however, was delighted with it and became
-a staunch friend and admirer of the young sculptor,
-whose studio he frequently visited. On one
-occasion he found Michelangelo at work on a
-<i>Sleeping Cupid</i> so perfectly modelled and
-conceived in a spirit so truly Hellenic, as to appear
-a masterpiece of antique art. Lorenzo suggested
-that Michelangelo should make it look as if it had
-been buried under the earth for many centuries,
-so that the statue, being taken for a genuine
-antique, would sell much better, and the artist,
-more out of professional pride than in hopes of
-gain, followed his friend's suggestion. <i>The
-Sleeping Cupid</i> was sent to Rome, where Raffaelo
-Riario, Cardinal di San Giorgio, bought it as an
-antique for two hundred ducats, an evidence not
-so much of the Cardinal's ignorance as of
-Michelangelo's careful study of classical art.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This work was indirectly the cause of Michelangelo's
-first coming to Rome, for the Cardinal
-having discovered that his Cupid had been
-made in Florence was at first very angry at
-having been fooled, and insisted on the dealer,
-Baldassare del Milanese, taking back the statue
-and refunding the two hundred ducats (of which
-sum, by the way, Michelangelo had only received
-thirty ducats), but when his anger had subsided,
-the prelate, who was a liberal patron of art,
-shrewdly concluded that a sculptor who could
-so well imitate the antique was worth encouraging,
-and he forthwith despatched one of his
-gentlemen to Florence for the express purpose
-of discovering the mysterious forger and bringing
-him to Rome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Cardinal's emissary, after much fruitless
-search, chanced upon Michelangelo in his studio,
-and was so struck with the masterful manner in
-which the young sculptor made a pen-drawing of
-a hand in his presence, that he began to
-cross-examine him discreetly about his other works,
-and gradually learned all the story of the Cupid.
-Michelangelo, who longed to see Rome, which
-his visitor extolled as the widest field for an artist
-to study and to show his genius in, readily
-consented to leave Florence. In fact it appears that
-he was not very popular among his fellow-citizens
-owing to his former intimacy with the exiled
-Medici, and so, towards the end of June, 1496,
-he set foot in Rome for the first time. As to the
-<i>Sleeping Cupid</i>, nothing is known about its fate
-beyond the fact that it fell into the hands of Cesare
-Borgia at the sack of Urbino in 1592, and was
-by him presented to the Marchioness of Mantua,
-who in acknowledging the gift describes it as
-"without a peer among the works of modern
-times."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo was greatly disappointed in his
-hopes of obtaining lucrative employment from
-Cardinal Riario. Indeed, the only work which
-he did during the first few weeks of his sojourn
-consisted in a cartoon for a <i>Saint Francis receiving
-the Stigmata</i>, to be painted by the Cardinal's
-barber! Fortunately for the young artist a
-wealthy Roman gentleman, Messer Jacopo Galli,
-came to his rescue, commissioning a <i>Bacchus</i>,
-which is now in the National Museum at
-Florence, and a <i>Cupid</i>, believed by some to be the
-statue now in the Victoria and Albert Museum,
-South Kensington. Of all Michelangelo's works,
-this <i>Bacchus</i> is certainly the most realistic and
-least dignified, representing as it does a youth in
-the first stage of intoxication, holding a cup in
-his right hand and in his left a bunch of grapes,
-from which a mischievous little Satyr is slily
-helping himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The statue was greatly admired in Rome and
-was the means of bringing Michelangelo to the
-notice of the French king's envoy in Rome,
-Cardinal De la Groslaye de Villiers, who
-commissioned him to carve a marble group of <i>Our
-Lady holding the dead Christ in her arms</i>, for
-the price of four hundred and fifty golden
-ducats. The contract, dated August 26th, 1498,
-is still preserved in the Archivio Buonarroti, and
-concludes with these words: "And I, Jacopo
-Gallo, promise to his Most Reverend Lordship
-that the said Michelangelo will furnish the said
-work within one year, and that it shall be the
-most beautiful work in marble which Rome
-to-day can show, and that no master of our days
-shall be able to produce a better." We shall see,
-when describing this magnificent group, that
-Jacopo's boast and promise were more than
-justified.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While in Rome, Michelangelo kept up an
-active correspondence with Messer Lodovico,
-who, it appears, found himself in great financial
-straits at this time. Being a most dutiful and
-affectionate son, the young sculptor sent every
-available scudo of his money to succour his
-father and his three younger brothers, namely
-Buonarroto, born in 1477, whom he placed in
-the Arte della Seta; Giovan Simone, born in
-1479, who led a vagabond life and was a source
-of continual trouble, and Sigismondo, born in
-1481, who became a soldier. The letters which
-Michelangelo, in the midst of his artistic labours,
-found time to write home, full of tender solicitude
-and good advice and invariably containing a
-remittance, give us a touching insight into the
-beautiful and disinterested character which lay
-hidden underneath his stern and decidedly
-unattractive exterior.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He lived not only very economically, but
-penuriously, in order the better to help his family,
-and it appears that his health suffered not a little
-from these privations. His father heard of it,
-and wrote a letter, dated December 19th, 1500,
-in which these passages occur: "Economy is
-good, but above all do not be penurious; live
-moderately and do not stint yourself, and avoid
-hardships, because in your art, if you fall ill
-(which God forbid), you are a lost man. Above
-all things, never wash; have yourself rubbed
-down, but never wash!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Michelangelo returned to Florence in
-the spring of 1501, the fame of the great works
-which he had accomplished in Rome had already
-preceded him, and he was generally admitted to
-be the first sculptor of the day. Commissions
-came pouring in upon him, including one from
-Cardinal Francesco Piccolomini, who afterwards
-became Pope Pius III., for fifteen statues of saints
-to adorn the Piccolomini Chapel in the Duomo
-of Siena.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he completely neglected this work in order
-to devote himself with characteristic ardour to a
-more congenial task, that of carving a colossal
-statue of David out of a huge block of marble
-which had been previously spoiled by an inferior
-artist and abandoned as useless in the Opera del
-Duomo. Surmounting the enormous technical
-difficulties which he had to contend with, Michelangelo
-succeeded, after nearly two years of hard
-work, in evolving from the crippled block of
-marble one of the greatest masterpieces of
-modern art.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the 14th of May, 1504, <i>Il Gigante</i>, as it
-was called by the Florentines, left Michelangelo's
-workshop and was dragged with much difficulty
-to the Piazza della Signoria, where it stood until
-the year 1873, when it was removed to the hall
-of the Accademia delle Belle Arti. It has fortunately
-suffered very little from its exposure in the
-mild Florentine air, but the left arm was shattered
-by a stone during the tumults of 1527. The
-broken pieces were carefully collected, however,
-by Vasari and a young sculptor, Cecchino De'
-Rossi, who restored the arm in 1543. Another
-giant David in bronze was commissioned to
-Michelangelo in 1502 by the Republic, who
-wished to make a present of it to a French statesman,
-Florimond Robertet, but although this work
-is known to have remained for more than a
-hundred years in the château of Bury, near Blois, it
-has since disappeared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While wrestling with the difficulties of his
-<i>David</i>, Michelangelo found time to accomplish
-many other important works, including two marble
-tondi in bas-relief, the first of which is now in the
-National Museum at Florence and the other in
-the Royal Academy, London. Both represent
-the <i>Madonna and Child with the Infant St. John</i>,
-and although lacking in finish they deserve to
-rank among the finest of Michelangelo's works.
-The composition is beautiful and simple, the
-modelling bold and the expression of the
-Madonna singularly noble and striking.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In April, 1503, Michelangelo was commissioned
-by the Operai of the Duomo to carve out
-of Carrara marble twelve colossal statues of the
-Apostles, one to be finished each year, and a
-workshop was specially built for the sculptor in
-the Borgo Pinti, but the contract could not be
-carried out, the unfinished <i>St. Matthew</i>, now in
-the courtyard of the Accademia, in Florence,
-being the only work which resulted from this
-commission: "And in order not altogether to give
-up painting," says Condivi, "he executed a round
-panel of Our Lady for Messer Agnolo Doni, a
-Florentine citizen, for which he received seventy
-ducats." This tondo, representing <i>The Holy
-Family</i>, with nude figures in the background, is
-now in the Uffizi Gallery, and apart from its
-originality and artistic merit, it is especially
-interesting as being the only easel picture which
-may be attributed with absolute certainty to
-Michelangelo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In August, 1504, Michelangelo was commissioned
-by his friend and protector, Piero Soderini,
-Gonfaloniere of the Republic, to decorate a wall
-in the Sala del Gran Consiglio in the Palazzo
-Vecchio, a most flattering compliment to the
-young artist, as Leonardo da Vinci, then at the
-height of his fame, was already engaged in preparing
-cartoons for the opposite wall. Leonardo's
-designs represented the famous <i>Fight for the
-Standard</i>, an episode of the battle of Anghiari,
-fought in 1440, when the Florentines defeated
-Niccolò Piccinino. Michelangelo selected for
-his subject an episode in the war with Pisa, which
-gave him an opportunity to display his wonderful
-draughtsmanship and his profound knowledge
-of the human frame.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Benvenuto Cellini, who copied the cartoon in
-1513, just before its mysterious disappearance,
-describes it as follows: "Michelangelo portrayed
-a number of foot soldiers who, the season being
-summer, had gone to bathe in the Arno. He drew
-them at the moment the alarm is sounded, and
-the men, all naked, rush to arms. So splendid is
-their action that nothing survives of ancient or of
-modern art which touches the same lofty point
-of excellence; and, as I have already said, the
-design of the great Leonardo was itself most
-admirably beautiful. These two cartoons stood,
-one in the Palace of the Medici, the other in the
-hall of the Pope. So long as they remained
-intact they were the school of the world. Though
-the divine Michelangelo in later life finished that
-great chapel of Pope Julius, he never rose halfway
-to the same pitch of power; his genius never
-afterwards attained to the force of those first
-studies."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leonardo, after having begun painting a group
-of horsemen on the wall, abandoned the task
-with characteristic fickleness, and Michelangelo
-having been summoned to Rome in the beginning
-of 1505 by Pope Julius II., left his work
-unfinished. It is said that a worthless rival named
-Baccio Bandinelli, envious of Michelangelo's
-greatness, destroyed the famous cartoon of Pisa.
-A sketch of the whole composition may be seen
-in the Albertina Gallery at Vienna, but perhaps
-the most complete copy of the cartoon is the
-monochrome painting belonging to the Earl of
-Leicester, at Holkham Hall.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-THE TRAGEDY OF THE TOMB
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo little suspected when he left
-Florence that he was bidding adieu for ever to
-his happiness and peace of mind. Hitherto he
-had had to deal with generous tyrants, such as
-the Medici, with rivals whose envy was shorn of
-dangers by their cowardice, and with a protector
-such as Piero Soderini, whom Machiavelli taunted
-with being a weakling only fit for the Limbo of
-Infants. It was not until he came to Rome that
-he was brought face to face with a man blessed
-or cursed with indomitable energy, boundless
-ambition and a morbid restlessness which was
-probably the resultant of these two forces. Both
-Julius II. and Michelangelo were what their
-contemporaries called <i>uomini terribili</i>, proud,
-passionate, given to sudden bursts of fury, yet generous
-withal and truly great. For two such men to live
-together in uninterrupted peace and goodwill
-would have been a sheer impossibility.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After some months of hesitation, Julius
-II. finally decided upon the best way of employing
-Michelangelo's talents. He resolved to have a
-magnificent monument erected during his lifetime,
-and confided the task to the young sculptor.
-In an incredibly short time Michelangelo
-prepared his great design, which pleased the Pope
-so much that he at once sent him to Carrara to
-quarry the necessary marble. During the eight
-months which he spent at Carrara, Michelangelo
-blocked out two of the figures for the tomb, so
-anxious was he to begin his colossal work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In November Michelangelo returned to Rome,
-where a house and spacious workshop were as
-signed to him near the Vatican, and in January,
-1506, most of the marble, which had come by
-water, was spread all over the Piazza of St. Peter's:
-"This immense quantity of marble," says
-Condivi, "was the admiration of all and a joy to the
-Pope, who heaped immeasurable favours upon
-Michelangelo, and was so interested in his work
-that he ordered a drawbridge to be thrown across
-from the Corridore to the rooms of Michelangelo,
-by which he might visit him in private."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's original project of the tomb
-subsequently underwent so many modifications
-and reductions, that Condivi's account of what
-the monument should have been is deeply
-interesting: "The tomb was to have had four faces,
-two of eighteen braccia, that served for the flanks,
-so that it was to be a square and a half in plan.
-All round about the outside were niches for
-statues, and between niche and niche terminal
-figures; to these were bound other statues, like
-prisoners, upon certain square plinths, rising
-from the ground and projecting from the monument.
-They represented the liberal arts, each
-with her symbol, denoting that, like Pope Julius,
-all the virtues were the prisoners of Death,
-because they would never find such favour and
-encouragement as he gave them. Above these
-ran the cornice that tied all the work together.
-On its plane were four great statues; one of these,
-the Moses, may be seen in San Pietro ad Vincula.
-So the work mounted upward until it ended in
-a plane. Upon it were two angels who supported
-an arc; one appeared to be smiling as though he
-rejoiced that the soul of the Pope had been
-received amongst the blessed spirits, the other
-wept, as if sad that the world had been deprived
-of such a man. Above one end was the entrance
-to the sepulchre in a small chamber, built like a
-temple; in the middle was a marble sarcophagus,
-where the body of the Pope was to be buried;
-everything worked out with marvellous art.
-Briefly, more than forty statues went to the whole
-work, not counting the subjects in mezzo rilievo
-to be cast in bronze, all appropriate in their
-stories and proclaiming the acts of this great
-Pontiff."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the monument would have covered an area
-of about 34½ feet by 23 feet, the church of
-St. Peter, although restored by Nicholas V., was
-found to be too small to contain it, and Julius
-II. decided to rebuild the whole church on a more
-magnificent scale, after designs prepared by
-Bramante.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eager enthusiasm with which Michelangelo
-attacked his colossal task was not destined
-to last long. One day a quantity of marble arrived
-from Carrara, and Michelangelo, desiring at once
-to pay the freight and porterage, went to ask the
-Pope for money, but found his Holiness occupied.
-He paid the men out of his own pocket,
-but when he returned on several succeeding days
-he found access to the Vatican more difficult
-than usual, and finally learned that the Pope had
-given orders that he should not be admitted.
-Julius II., always entangled in warlike adventures,
-was evidently short of money and could not or
-would not pay Michelangelo at the time. The
-proud and short-tempered sculptor flew into a
-passion, and exclaiming that "henceforward the
-Pope must look for him elsewhere if he wanted
-him," took horse at once and returned to
-Florence, vainly pursued by five messengers from
-the Pope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was thus that the gigantic work on which
-he had set his heart was interrupted for the first
-time, and the curtain rose on the first act of that
-"tragedy of the tomb," as Condivi appropriately
-calls it, by which the rest of Michelangelo's life
-was darkened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had no sooner arrived in Florence than he
-received an imperative order from the Pope to
-return immediately to Rome under pain of his
-displeasure, but Michelangelo's blood was up, and
-he disregarded alike the threats of the Pope and
-the exhortations of Piero Soderini, who was greatly
-embarrassed, having received three official Briefs
-from Julius II., demanding that the artist should
-be sent back either by fair means or by force.
-Fearing actual violence, Michelangelo had made
-up his mind to go to Constantinople, but the
-Gonfaloniere dissuaded him, saying "that it was
-better to die with the Pope than to live with the Turk."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the meantime, Julius II., after subduing
-Perugia, had entered Bologna in triumph on
-November 11th, 1506, and he had not been many
-days in the town before he despatched another
-urgent message to the Signoria asking for Michelangelo
-to be sent to him. The artist finally gave
-in, and proceeded to Bologna, armed with a most
-flattering letter from the Signoria, but feeling
-"like a man with a halter round his neck." His
-misgivings, however, were unfounded, for Julius
-II., who was only too glad to have won his artist
-back, welcomed Michelangelo most cordially and
-commissioned him to make a great portrait statue
-of him in bronze, to be placed in front of the church
-of San Petronio. And thus were these two men,
-who had so many points in common that they
-regarded each other with mutual fear, like giants
-conscious of their strength, reconciled for the
-time.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-038"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-038.jpg" alt="THE CREATION OF MAN.">
-<br>
-THE CREATION OF MAN.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Pope returned to Rome in very good
-spirits, leaving Michelangelo in Bologna to finish
-the colossal statue, which was only completed
-on February 21st, 1508, after much hard work
-and many disappointments, chiefly caused by
-the ignorance of the bronze-founder, who cast it
-faultily. It is greatly to be regretted that this
-work, which cost Michelangelo over a year of
-unremitting labour, should have been destroyed
-in 1511, when the Bentivogli returned to Bologna
-and drove out the Papal Legate. A huge cannon,
-ironically called La Giulia, was cast out of the
-broken fragments. Michelangelo, having
-completed his task, hurried back to Florence, and
-three days after his arrival Messer Lodovico
-emancipated his son from parental control, as we
-learn from a document dated March 13th, 1508.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It appears that Michelangelo intended to settle
-down for several years in his native city in order
-to decorate the Sala del Consiglio, for which he
-was to receive three thousand ducats, and to
-carry out other important commissions, including
-that of twelve statues of the Apostles for Santa
-Maria del Fiore, but "his Medusa," as he called
-Julius II., would not suffer him to remain in
-peace, and summoned him to Rome.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-THE SISTINE CHAPEL
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The artist obeyed, hoping that the Pope would
-allow him to go on with the tomb, but, during
-his absence, Michelangelo's rivals had persuaded
-Julius II. that it was unlucky to have a monument
-erected during his lifetime, and that it would be
-much better to set Michelangelo to work on the
-vault of the Sistine Chapel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This they did maliciously, because they never
-suspected that Michelangelo was as great a
-painter as he was a sculptor, and hoped that
-he would prove himself inferior to the task, and
-thus lose the Pontiff's favour. "All the
-disagreements which I have had with Pope Julius," wrote
-Michelangelo to Marco Vigerio, "have been
-brought about by the envy of Bramante and of
-Raphael of Urbino," who were the cause that his
-monument was not finished during his lifetime.
-Bitter, unscrupulous rivalry was the leper-spot
-that marked the Italian Renaissance, especially
-at the Papal Court.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo would gladly have declined the
-commission, for which he considered himself unfit,
-but, seeing the Pope's obstinacy, he reluctantly
-set to work on May 10th, 1508. The difficulties
-which he had to surmount were enormous, but he
-was not a man to be frightened by obstacles,
-however formidable. Knowing little or nothing of
-the technicalities of fresco painting, Michelangelo
-at first called six Florentine painters to his aid,
-including his old friends Francesco Granacci and
-Giuliano Bugiardini. But he was too exacting,
-and aimed at an ideal of perfection which his
-assistants could never attain, so that in January,
-1509, he sent them all away, and destroying the
-work done by them, shut himself alone in the
-chapel to wrestle single-handed with his gigantic
-task.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The result fully justified his confidence in his
-own powers. To attempt an adequate description
-of the vault of the Sistine Chapel in this little
-book would be a hopeless task. The stupendous
-frescoes which adorn it, although described in
-hundreds of volumes, still afford material for
-much original study and research, but we must
-here content ourselves with a mere enumeration
-of the principal motives which go to make up this
-grand pictorial symphony.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo chose for his subject the Story
-of the Creation, the Fall of Man, the Flood, and
-the Second Entry of Sin into the World, illustrated
-by a series of nine compositions on the
-central space of the ceiling. Twenty magnificent
-nude figures, representing Athletes, decorate
-the corners of these central compositions, and
-support bronze medallions held in place by oak
-garlands and draperies. The shape of the ceiling
-is what is commonly called a barrel vaulting
-resting on lunettes, six to the length and two to the
-width of the building. The second part of the
-decoration demonstrates the need for a scheme
-of Salvation, promised by the Prophets and Sibyls,
-whose majestic figures are painted alternately in
-the triangular spaces between the lunettes, in
-the lower part of which is a series of wonderful
-groups representing the ancestors of Christ.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo, although engaged on a great
-pictorial work, never considered himself as
-anything but a sculptor, and followed in painting
-the same systems that he would have adopted in
-his own art. Sir Charles Holroyd, in his recent
-most valuable contribution to Michelangelesque
-literature, very justly remarks: "When Pope
-Julius prevented Michelangelo from going on with
-his beloved project of the tomb and made him
-paint the vault, the master set to work to produce
-a similar conception to the tomb in a painted
-form. The vault became a great temple of
-painted marble and painted sculptures raised
-in mid air above the walls of the chapel. The
-cornices and pilasters are of simple Renaissance
-architecture, the only ornaments he allowed
-himself to use being similar to those he would have
-used as a sculptor. Acorns, the family device
-of the della Rovere, rams' skulls, and scallop
-shells, and the one theme of decoration that
-Michelangelo always delighted in&mdash;the human
-figure. The Prophets and Sibyls took the positions
-occupied by the principal figures designed
-for the tomb, like the great statue of Moses.
-The Athletes at the corner of the ribs of the roof
-were in place of the bound captives, two of which
-are now in the Louvre, and the nine histories
-of the Creation and the Flood fill the panels like
-the bronze reliefs of the tomb."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo must have toiled with almost
-superhuman energy at his great work. In a letter
-to his favourite brother, Buonarroto, dated
-October 17th, 1509, he writes: "I live here in great
-distress and with the greatest fatigue of body,
-and have not a friend of any sort, and do not
-want one, and have not even enough time to eat
-necessary food." This is not surprising when we
-remember that as early as the 1st of November,
-1509, the first and most important part of this
-colossal work, which comprises three hundred
-and ninety-four figures, the majority ten feet high,
-was exposed to view, and greatly admired by the
-Pope, who, being vehement by nature and
-impatient of delay, insisted upon having it
-uncovered, although it was still incomplete.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Such was the impatience of Julius II. that on
-one occasion he threatened to have Michelangelo
-thrown down off the scaffolding if he did not
-hasten the completion of the work, and even
-went so far as to strike the artist with a stick.
-Thus urged, Michelangelo uncovered his work
-on the 1st of November, 1512, although he used
-to say in after years that he had been prevented
-by the hurry of the Pope from finishing it as he
-would have wished. "Michelangelo's fame and
-the expectation they had of him," says Condivi,
-"drew the whole of Rome to the chapel, whither
-the Pope also rushed, even before the dust raised
-by the taking down the scaffolding had settled."
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-SECOND FLORENTINE PERIOD
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Julius II. died on February 21st, 1513, four
-months after the completion of the great work with
-which his name will remain as indelibly associated
-as that of Michelangelo. Shortly before his death
-he had ordered that the tomb which Michelangelo
-had begun should be finished, and had
-instructed his nephew, Cardinal Aginense, and
-Cardinal Santi Quattro, to see that everything
-should be carried out according to the original
-designs. But his executors, finding the project
-far too grand and expensive, had it altered, so
-that Michelangelo began all over again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He set to work with great energy and goodwill,
-determined to finish the monument now that its
-completion appeared to him almost as a sacred
-debt to the memory of his dead patron. But the
-strange fatality that presided over the tragedy
-of the tomb again interfered. Cardinal Giovanni
-de' Medici, who had been Michelangelo's friend
-and fellow-pupil at the Medicean Court, succeeded
-Julius II. on the pontifical throne and assumed
-the name of Leo X. No sooner were the magnificent
-festivities over with which he celebrated
-his accession, than he sent for Michelangelo and
-ordered him to proceed to Florence to ornament
-the façade of San Lorenzo with sculpture and
-marble work. It was in vain that Michelangelo
-protested, saying that he was bound by contract
-to finish the tomb before undertaking any other
-commission, for Leo X. was as self-willed and
-imperious as his predecessor, and "in this fashion,"
-says Condivi, "Michelangelo left the tomb and
-betook himself weeping to Florence."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not surprising that the artist should have
-wept tears of bitter disappointment, for we learn
-from a letter to his brother Buonarroto, dated
-June 15th, 1515, that at this time not only had he
-completed the Moses and the Captives in marble,
-but the panels in relief were ready for casting.
-Had he been left in peace, Michelangelo would
-certainly have finished the monument to Pope
-Julius in its modified form in half the time which
-he wasted quarrying marble from Carrara and
-Pietrasanta for the façade of San Lorenzo. For
-over two years Michelangelo was engaged in the
-tedious work of roadmaking and quarrying. In
-August, 1518, he wrote: "I must be very patient
-until the mountains are tamed and the men are
-mastered. Then we shall get on more quickly.
-But what I have promised, that will I do by some
-means, and I will make the most beautiful thing
-that has ever been done in Italy if God helps me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had evidently warmed to his work, and it is
-melancholy to think that Fate again interposed to
-prevent its completion. Giuliano de' Medici, the
-Pope's only brother, and Lorenzo, his nephew,
-having died at this time, Leo X. ordered
-Michelangelo to interrupt the façade of San Lorenzo
-and to build a new sacristy in which he proposed
-to erect a monument to their memory. The
-document exonerating Michelangelo from all
-duties and obligations in connection with the
-façade is dated March 10th, 1520.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo only now found time to carry out
-a commission which he had received seven years
-previously from a Roman gentleman, Metello
-Vari, namely a nude statue of Christ bearing the
-cross. It was finished in the summer of 1521 and
-sent to Rome, the extremities being left in rough
-to prevent their being broken during the journey.
-Pietro Urbino accompanied the statue to Rome,
-with orders to complete it, and very nearly spoiled
-it by his careless and inferior workmanship. The
-<i>Risen Christ</i>, now in the church of the Minerva,
-is one of the most noble and majestic of religious
-statues in existence; the torso and arms are
-particularly fine, but the hands and feet, which were
-spoiled by Urbino, are stumpy and defective.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leo X.'s pontificate, which, although short,
-was one of the most glorious and eventful in the
-history of art, came to an abrupt conclusion on
-December 1st, 1521. By a strange irony of fate,
-the magnificent patron of art and letters was
-succeeded by a pious and simple-minded Dutch
-prelate, who regarded statues as pagan idols,
-and said that the Sistine Chapel was "nothing
-but a room full of naked people." There is little
-doubt that he secretly longed to have it
-whitewashed. Fortunately for art and artists, his
-pontificate was of brief duration, and in 1523
-Cardinal Giulio de' Medici was elected in his
-stead, under the name of Clement VII.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the following year Michelangelo finished the
-new sacristy of San Lorenzo, and immediately set
-to work on the Medicean tombs. But he was
-constantly worried and interrupted by new
-commissions from the Pope, who wanted him, among
-other things, to build a library in which to place
-the famous collection of books and manuscripts
-begun by Cosimo de' Medici: "I cannot work
-at one thing with my hands and at another with
-my brain!" exclaimed the artist in despair.
-Nevertheless he undertook to build the library,
-and carried on both works at the same time,
-constantly urged on by Pope Clement, who wrote
-to him in an autograph letter: "Thou knowest
-that Popes have no long lives, and we cannot
-yearn more than we do to behold the chapel
-with the tombs of our kinsmen, and so also the
-library."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were troublous times for Italy. After the
-disastrous battle of Pavia, in which he had lost
-everything "except honour," Francis I. concluded
-with the Sforza of Milan, with Venice, Florence,
-and Pope Clement VII. a league against Charles
-V., which proved fatal to all who took part in it.
-In 1527, a rabble of German and Spanish soldiers
-of fortune, led by the renegade Connétable de
-Bourbon, took and pillaged Rome, and the Pope
-himself was besieged in the Castle of Saint Angelo
-for nine months. The Florentines availed themselves
-of this opportunity to shake off the despotic
-yoke of the Medici, but two years later, Charles
-V. concluded the peace of Barcelona with Clement
-VII., one of the conditions being that he should
-re-establish the Medicean rule in Florence. But
-the citizens would not give up their newly-acquired
-liberty without a struggle, and prepared for a
-desperate resistance. Michelangelo was appointed
-Commissary-General of defence, and showed himself
-worthy of the confidence placed in him by
-his fellow-citizens.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was in a great measure due to the skill with
-which he fortified the town, and more especially
-the hill of San Miniato, that Florence was enabled
-to withstand the attacks of the Imperial troops
-for twelve months. But the treachery of
-Malatesta Baglioni, who commanded the troops of the
-Republic, paralyzed the efforts of Michelangelo
-and of its other brave defenders, and in August,
-1530, the city fell. Alessandro de' Medici returned
-in triumph to Florence, and would certainly have
-beheaded Michelangelo, who only saved himself
-by hiding in the bell-tower of San Nicolò beyond
-the Arno, until the first fury of his enemies was
-over.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of his important military duties,
-Michelangelo continued working at the Medicean
-tombs during the siege, and also painted a
-panel picture, representing <i>Leda and the Swan</i>,
-originally intended for the Duke of Ferrara, but
-which he afterwards gave to his pupil Antonio
-Mini, together with many cartoons and drawings,
-that he might dower two sisters with the proceeds.
-It was sold to the King of France and hung
-at Fontainebleau until the time of Louis XIII.,
-one of whose ministers ordered it to be
-destroyed as an improper picture. According to
-another version, however, it was only hidden,
-and afterwards brought to England. The <i>Leda
-and the Swan</i> now in the National Gallery is
-regarded by some as the damaged and much
-restored original of Michelangelo's famous
-picture. Clement VII.'s anger soon abated, and
-Michelangelo was able to return to his work,
-thanks chiefly to the kind offices of Baccio Valori,
-the Papal envoy in Florence, to whom the
-sculptor presented, out of gratitude, the fine
-statue of <i>Apollo,</i> now in the National Museum at
-Florence.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-050"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-050.jpg" alt="TOMB OF LORENZO DE' MEDICI.">
-<br>
-TOMB OF LORENZO DE' MEDICI.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Medicean tombs progressed but slowly,
-for all this time Michelangelo was worried
-almost to death by the Duke of Urbino, a nephew
-of Julius II., who insisted upon his finishing the
-famous tomb, while Clement VII., on the other
-hand, threatened the artist with excommunication
-if he neglected his work in the new sacristy
-for anything else. Probably the first statue to
-be finished was the beautiful Madonna suckling
-the Child Jesus, represented as a strong boy
-straddling across her knee. It is one of Michelangelo's
-noblest works, possessing all the majestic
-simplicity of his earlier Madonnas enhanced by
-greater power.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To give an adequate description of the tombs
-of Giuliano and Lorenzo de' Medici would be
-impossible within the narrow limits of this little
-book. Suffice it to say that the princes are
-represented in the garb of ancient warriors, each seated
-in a niche above a sarcophagus, on which two
-allegorical figures recline. Lorenzo appears to
-be plunged in sorrowful meditation; at his feet
-recline the colossal statues of <i>Evening</i>,
-represented by a powerful male figure, apparently on
-the point of falling asleep, and <i>Dawn</i>, symbolized
-by a beautiful young woman in the act of awaking,
-not to joy and hope, but to another day of
-sorrow. The beauty of this last figure cannot be
-described; it is such as the imagination of the
-ancient Greeks might have endowed a goddess
-with. The statue of <i>Dawn</i> was finished in 1531,
-soon after the fall of Florence and the return
-of the Medici, and there is little doubt that
-Michelangelo intended his mournful figures to
-express sorrow at the loss of Florentine liberty,
-rather than at the death of the two young
-princes. The same idea is evident in the tomb
-of Giuliano, with the two figures of <i>Night</i>,
-symbolized by a sleeping woman of singular beauty and
-power, and <i>Day</i>, a vigorous bearded giant just
-rising to his work and looking over his shoulder
-as if dazzled by the glare of the rising sun.
-Although the head of <i>Day</i> is unfinished, it is a
-striking example of how Michelangelo was able
-to give life and expression to his work from the
-first stroke of his chisel.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-THE LAST JUDGMENT
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1534 Michelangelo left Florence for the
-last time. His proud and independent spirit was
-unable to tolerate Alessandro's petty tyranny.
-The unfinished bust of Brutus, now in the
-Bargello, a vigorous and striking piece of work, is
-another proof of his intense longing for liberty.
-On arriving in Rome he found that Clement VII. had
-died two days previously, and that Paul III.,
-Farnese, had been elected Pope.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo had finally come to an understanding
-with the executors of Julius II., the
-agreement being that he should make a tomb with
-one façade only, using the marbles already carved
-for the quadrangular tomb and supplying six
-statues from his own hand, the rest of the work to be
-completed by other artists under his supervision.
-He therefore hoped to finish the tomb which had
-embittered thirty years of his life, but once more
-he was doomed to disappointment, for Paul
-III. immediately appointed him chief architect,
-sculptor and painter of the Vatican, with a pension of
-1,200 golden crowns, and ordered him to carry
-out a commission which Clement VII. had given
-him shortly before his death. It was no less a
-task than to paint the end wall of the Sistine
-Chapel. Prayers and remonstrance were alike
-unavailing, and the doors of the Sistine closed
-once more upon the master, not to be opened
-again until the Christmas of 1541, when his
-<i>Last Judgment</i> was uncovered "to the admiration
-of Rome and of the whole world."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thirty years earlier Michelangelo had depicted
-the Creation on the vault of this same chapel;
-he now took for his subject the final doom of all
-things created. The colossal work which cost
-him eight years' labour is a magnificent but almost
-terrifying pictorial rendering of the <i>Dies Irae</i>,
-the Day of Wrath, when "even the just shall not
-feel secure." Awe and terror are equally apparent
-among the spirits of the blessed crowding round
-the dread Judge, and on the despairing countenances
-of the condemned souls dragged down by
-hideous demons towards the infernal river, where
-Charon in his boat "beckons to them with eyes
-of fire and beats the delaying souls with uplifted
-oar." The rendering of the subject is thoroughly
-Dantesque, and very different from the conventional
-treatment of the same theme by all preceding
-artists. The composition, however, and indeed
-several individual groups and figures, remind
-us forcibly of the Campo Santo at Pisa.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although all true artists received this work with
-enthusiasm, as Vasari says, and came from every
-part of Italy to study it, Michelangelo's enemies,
-including Pietro Aretino, the most immoral writer
-of his age, criticised it as a highly improper
-painting, because most of the figures were nude. So
-incensed was Michelangelo at this that he
-revenged himself by painting one of his critics,
-Messer Biagio da Cesena, as Minos surrounded
-by a crowd of devils. Some years later Paul
-IV. obtained Michelangelo's consent to partly drape
-most of the figures, and the work was done with
-commendable discretion by Daniele da Volterra,
-who thereby earned the nickname of Il Braghettone,
-or the breeches-maker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Unfortunately the smoke from the altar candles
-and censers, and the dust of centuries have
-darkened and almost completely destroyed the
-original colour of this fresco; ominous cracks
-have also appeared in several places, but it is to
-be hoped that time will spare one of the greatest
-masterpieces of modern art for many centuries
-to come.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No sooner had Michelangelo finished the <i>Last
-Judgment</i>, than Paul III. set him to work on the
-side walls of the chapel which Antonio da San
-Gallo had just completed, and which is now
-known as the Cappella Paolina. Michelangelo
-was nearly seventy years old at this time, and
-fresco painting over a large surface is a fatiguing
-task even for a young man, but the veteran artist
-obeyed, and in 1549 he completed what was to
-be his last pictorial work, the two frescoes
-representing the <i>Conversion of St. Paul</i> and the
-<i>Martyrdom of St. Peter</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The composition of these pictures is as masterly
-as ever, and the drawing, especially in the
-fore-shortened figures, faultless, but for the first time
-we are aware of something cold and unnatural,
-very different from the glorious life and power with
-which the frescoes of the Sistine literally glow.
-Michelangelo was getting old, and even his
-Titanic frame could not withstand the insidious
-attacks of time. He was seventy-five years of age
-when he carried these frescoes to completion, and
-he himself confessed to Vasari that he did so
-"with great effort and fatigue." Nevertheless he
-found sufficient time and strength to complete
-the famous monument of Pope Julius II. during
-the intervals of his fresco painting, and in 1545
-the tragedy of the tomb finally came to an end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It must have been with feelings of mingled
-relief and bitterness that Michelangelo surveyed
-the much modified tomb in the church of San
-Pietro in Vincoli. The mighty design which had
-fired his youthful ambition forty years previously
-had dwindled down to a comparatively unimposing
-monument, but everybody will agree with
-Condivi when he says that "although botched
-and patched up, it is the most worthy monument
-to be found in Rome, or perhaps in the world;
-if for nothing else, at least for the three statues
-that are by the hand of the master." Of the
-central figure, representing Moses, we shall have
-occasion to speak later on; the remaining statues
-by Michelangelo to which Condivi alludes are
-two female figures of rare beauty, representing
-Active and Contemplative Life. The rest of the
-tomb was finished by Raffaello da Montelupo
-and by other assistants under the master's supervision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having, as best he could, fulfilled his sacred
-pledge to the memory of Julius II., Michelangelo
-appeared to consider his artistic career as
-practically at an end. He was always inclined to
-sadness, but a cloud of deeper melancholy seemed
-to settle over him, and like Titian, Tintoretto,
-and other artists who attained to great old age,
-he turned his thoughts almost exclusively to
-religious speculation. In one of his sonnets he
-beautifully expresses the yearning for peace and
-rest which had taken possession of his
-storm-tossed soul:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Painting nor sculpture now can lull to rest<br>
- My soul, that turns to His great love on high,<br>
- Whose arms to clasp us on the Cross were spread.[<a id="chap04fn2text"></a><a href="#chap04fn2">2</a>]<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap04fn2"></a>
-[<a href="#chap04fn2text">2</a>] "The Sonnets of Michelangelo." By J. A. Symonds,
-No. lxv.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Henceforward he regarded his art as a devotional
-exercise more than anything else. The unfinished
-marble group of the <i>Deposition</i>, now in the
-Duomo at Florence, and which he intended
-should be placed over his tomb, was carved by
-the master during these years of serene
-preparation for his approaching end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Throughout his long and laborious career,
-devoted to the threefold worship of God, art and
-his country, Michelangelo had constantly refused
-to think of other ties, remarking that he had
-"espoused the affectionate fantasy which makes of
-art an idol." From some of his sonnets, however,
-it would appear that while at the court of Lorenzo
-the Magnificent he had secretly cherished a deep
-and hopeless passion for the beautiful Luigia de'
-Medici, who died in 1494. Forty years were to
-elapse ere in his heart, yet youthful at the
-approach of age, another woman, and she the first
-of her era, Vittoria Colonna, occupied the place
-left vacant by Luigia de' Medici. The friendship
-between these two lofty spirits, based upon
-mutual admiration and esteem, is one of the
-most beautiful romances in history, and inspired
-Michelangelo with some of his finest poems. It
-was brought to a close in 1547 by Vittoria
-Colonna's death, which left Michelangelo "dazed
-as one bereft of sense." "Nothing," says
-Condivi, "grieved him so much in after years as that
-when he went to see her on her death-bed he did
-not kiss her on the brow or face, as he did kiss
-her hand."
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-ST. PETER'S
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It will be remembered that Pope Julius II. had
-ordered Bramante to rebuild the church of
-St. Peter's on a more magnificent scale, in order
-that his tomb should derive additional grandeur
-from its stately surroundings. Bramante was
-succeeded by Raphael, Peruzzi and Antonio da
-Sangallo, and when the latter died in October,
-1546, Paul III. conferred the post of architect-in-chief
-upon Michelangelo. But the aged master
-at first refused, saying that architecture was not
-his art, and it was only when the Pope issued a
-peremptory <i>motu proprio</i> that he set to work,
-on condition that he should receive no payment
-for his services.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo returned to Bramante's original
-design of the Greek cross, which had undergone
-considerable alterations, his object being to erect
-a perfectly symmetrical building in such a manner
-that its dominant feature, both from within and
-without, should be the cupola. He began by
-demolishing most of Sangallo's work, and severely
-putting a stop to all jobbery, thereby creating a
-number of enemies who did all in their power to
-have him removed from his post. But Julius III.,
-who succeeded Paul III. in 1549, had implicit
-faith in Michelangelo, and the colossal work
-proceeded so rapidly, in spite of intrigues and
-opposition, that in 1557 the great cupola was
-commenced.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The master was now unable, owing to his extreme
-old age, to personally superintend the building,
-so that he constructed a wooden model, still
-preserved at the Vatican, after which his
-assistants carried on the work. From the window of
-his house Michelangelo used to watch for hours
-together the huge cupola slowly rounding itself
-against the sky, and wondered, perhaps, in how
-many years after his death it would be finished.
-The evening of Michelangelo's long life was
-saddened by the loss of nearly all who were near
-and dear to him. His two remaining brothers
-(for Buonarroto had died of the plague in 1528)
-passed away in Florence, and the only
-representative of the family, besides the aged artist,
-was his nephew Leonardo, only son of his
-favourite brother, Buonarroto. Although a
-confirmed bachelor himself, Michelangelo prevailed
-upon his nephew to marry, and Leonardo
-became the head of the still existing branch of the
-Buonarroti family. Another terrible loss to
-Michelangelo was the death of his faithful
-servant Francesco Urbino, of whom he wrote to
-Vasari: "While Urbino living kept me alive, in
-dying he has taught me to die, not unwillingly,
-but rather with a desire for death. The better
-part of me has gone with him, and nothing is
-left to me now but endless sorrow."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In spite of old age, illness and afflictions,
-Michelangelo's last years were perhaps the busiest of a
-life of uninterrupted work. To this period must
-be attributed the plan for the improvements upon
-the Capitol; the design for the church of San
-Giovanni del Fiorentini; the drawing for the
-monument to Giangiacomo de' Medici which
-Leone Leoni erected in the Milan Cathedral;
-the plans for the conversion of the Baths of
-Diocletian into the church of Santa Maria degli
-Angeli, and a number of other drawings and
-sketches for palaces, statues, monuments, which
-other artists carried out. He found time for all
-these things while actively superintending the
-construction of St. Peter's, and yet his restless
-spirit was not satisfied. In a beautiful sonnet,
-beginning with the words
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Giunto è gia' il corso della vita mia,<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-he laments the loss of his former creative power,
-and says that he has already felt the pangs of one
-death, while another is fast approaching. Nothing
-could be more pathetic than the spectacle
-of this strong creative spirit, already imprisoned
-in the iron embrace of death, yet struggling,
-like a Laocoon, against inevitable dissolution.
-Although nearly ninety years of age, Michelangelo
-would still walk abroad in all weathers, taking no
-precaution whatever. On February 14th, 1564,
-a friend of the master, Tiberio Calcagni, met
-him in the street on foot. It was raining hard,
-and Calcagni affectionately upbraided the old
-man for going about in such weather: "Leave
-me alone," cried Michelangelo fiercely, "I am ill,
-and cannot find rest anywhere."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He spent the next four days in an armchair
-near the fire, not complaining of any particular
-suffering, "quite composed and fully conscious,"
-as Diomede Leoni wrote to Leonardo, "but
-oppressed with continual drowsiness." In order
-to shake it off, the brave old man tried to mount
-his horse and go for a ride, but he was too weak.
-Without a word he sat down again in his armchair,
-and on the afternoon of February 18th,
-1564, a little before five o'clock, Michelangelo
-peacefully breathed his last. "He made his will
-in three words," says Vasari, "committing his
-soul into the hands of God, his body to the
-earth, and his goods to his nearest relatives."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leonardo arrived in Rome three days after his
-uncle's death. He had some difficulty in
-fulfilling Michelangelo's wish to be buried in his
-native town, as the Romans, who had conferred
-the citizenship on the artist, would not allow his
-body to be removed. At last the remains were
-smuggled out of Rome in a bale of merchandise
-and conveyed to Florence, where they were
-buried with great pomp and solemnity in the
-church of Santa Croce. For some unaccountable
-reason the group of the Pietà which Michelangelo
-had intended for his monument, was not
-placed over his tomb. The present very ugly
-monument was designed by Vasari at Leonardo's
-request. It bears the following inscription:
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- D. O. M.<br>
- <span class="smcap">Michaeli Angelo</span> BONAROTIO<br>
- <span class="smcap">Vetusta . Simoniorum . Familia<br>
- Sculptori . Pictori . et . Architecto<br>
- Fama . Omnibus . notissimo<br>
- Leonardus . patruo . Amantiss . et . de . se . optime . merito<br>
- Translatis . Roma . ejus . ossibus . atque . in . hoc . templo<br>
- Majorum . suorum . sepulcro . conditis<br>
- Cohortante. Seren. Cosmo. Med. Magno. Etrur. Duce. p. c.<br>
- Ann. Sal. M. D. LXX<br>
- Vixit. Ann. LXXXVIII. M. XI. D. XV.<br></span>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Other monuments to Michelangelo exist in the
-church of the Santissimi Apostoli at Rome, and
-on the hill of San Miniato, overlooking Florence,
-which he so bravely defended. But the noblest
-monument of Michelangelo the artist are his
-undying works, and the highest praise of
-Michelangelo the man and the Christian is contained
-in these simple words of a contemporary, Scipione
-Ammirato, "During the ninety years of his life,
-and in spite of numberless temptations, Michelangelo
-never did or said anything that was not
-pure and great."
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE ART OF MICHELANGELO
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-In the history of Art, Michelangelo stands
-isolated, a colossal figure looming terrible
-and majestic, a Titan towering far above the
-sons of men. Yet his was an age of giants.
-When Michelangelo came before the world the
-glorious tide of the Renaissance was still rising;
-sculpture and architecture had been brought to
-an unprecedented degree of excellence by such
-men as Lorenzo Ghiberti, Donatello and
-Brunelleschi, and following in Masaccio's footsteps, a
-host of great painters had successfully striven to
-renovate and perfect their art until it culminated
-in a Raphael. Leonardo da Vinci was already
-famous before Michelangelo had touched chisel
-or brush, but neither Leonardo's encyclopaedic
-achievements nor Raphael's meteorlike career
-can be regarded as the ultimate expression, the
-high-water mark of the Italian Renaissance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In Michelangelo we behold the giant embodiment
-of the true spirit of that wonderful period,
-the synthesis of its various forms of beauty and
-perfection, the final manifestation of its aesthetic
-possibilities. When Art first shook off the
-trammels of mediaevalism, she was content to worship
-at the shrine of Truth; with Botticelli and
-Leonardo she passed into vague regions of poetry.
-Raphael touched a more human note, often
-soaring to sublime harmonies: with Michelangelo
-the Renaissance reached its fullest
-development, attaining to a spiritual height, an
-almost superhuman loftiness hitherto undreamt
-of. Other men had excelled in painting, in
-sculpture, or in architecture before him, but
-Michelangelo was the first to attain perfection
-in every branch of Art, and such was his strong
-creative individuality that he left nothing to
-which he applied himself at the same stage where
-he had found it, bringing every manifestation of
-Art to the highest degree of perfection of which
-it was capable, and crowning all with that glorious
-aureola of spiritual grandeur which is the
-most awe-inspiring characteristic of his works.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that Michelangelo stands alone.
-Of other artists it is easy to trace the aesthetic
-derivation, but he is the product of no school,
-the result of no external influence. Michelangelo,
-the most perfect emanation of the Renaissance,
-came before an astonished world like Minerva
-leaping from the head of Jove, all armed and
-beautiful in her strength and wisdom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although he lived in an age when tradition
-was almost an artistic canon, and when the pupil
-felt in duty bound to follow his master's methods,
-even his early works reveal a singular originality
-and freedom from all imitative tendencies. Take
-for instance his <i>Battle of the Centaurs and Lapithae</i>,
-which he carved when working under Bertoldo
-at the court of Lorenzo the Magnificent: it has
-nothing in common with the school of Donatello,
-but is instinct with the spirit of antique art,
-showing that the young sculptor derived
-infinitely more profit from the close study of the
-antique masterpieces which Lorenzo had
-collected in the gardens of San Marco than from
-Bertoldo's precepts. That he succeeded in
-mastering the style and manner of the ancients to
-perfection is proved by such works as the
-<i>Sleeping Cupid</i>, now unfortunately lost, but which
-was bought by Cardinal Riario as an antique,
-and was the cause of Michelangelo's first coming
-to Rome; the <i>Bacchus</i>, hardly inferior to the
-<i>Dancing Faun of the Capitol</i>, and the beautiful
-statues of the Medicean tombs, which might
-easily be mistaken for the work of a Greek
-chisel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is certain that during the first years of his
-long sojourn in Rome he gave himself up
-enthusiastically to the study of its ancient monuments
-and works of art. When the famous group of
-the Laocoon was discovered in 1506, Michelangelo
-greeted it as a "miracle of art," affirming
-that the only statue worthy of being compared
-with it was the torso of Hercules, which he was
-never tired of drawing, and evidently had
-before his mind when painting the magnificent
-<i>ignudi</i> of the Sistine Chapel. In the Wicar
-Museum at Lille there are several copies by
-Michelangelo of various decorative motives in
-the Baths of Titus, showing how deeply he
-studied ancient art even in minor details. But
-he was far from being a servile imitator; indeed
-his powerful originality is never so strikingly
-manifest as in those of his masterpieces which
-appear to be conceived in a purely classical spirit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although deeply religious, even to the point
-of regarding his art, especially during the latter
-part of his life, more as a devotional exercise
-than as a stepping-stone to glory, Michelangelo
-had one essential point in common with Pagan
-artists, namely, a boundless and reverent cult for
-beauty in all its forms, and especially in its
-highest and most wonderful manifestation, the
-human frame. "He loved the beauty of the
-human body," says Condivi, "as one who best
-understands it, and likewise every beautiful thing&mdash;a
-beautiful horse, a beautiful dog, a beautiful
-country, a beautiful plant, and every place and
-thing beautiful and rare after its kind, admiring
-them all with a marvellous love; thus choosing
-beauty in nature as the bees gather honey from
-the flowers, and using it afterwards in his
-works." In one of his sonnets Michelangelo thus
-expressed his highest idea of beauty&mdash;man created
-in the image of God:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Nor hath God deigned to show Himself elsewhere<br>
- More clearly than in human forms sublime,<br>
- Which, since they image Him, alone I love.[<a id="chap05fn1text"></a><a href="#chap05fn1">1</a>]<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="footnote">
-<a id="chap05fn1"></a>
-[<a href="#chap05fn1text">1</a>] J. A. Symonds, "The Sonnets of Michelangelo and
-Campanella," n. lvi. p. 90.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-It is certain that he studied anatomy far more
-deeply than any of his contemporaries, not
-excluding Leonardo da Vinci, and devoted so
-much time to dissecting that "it turned his
-stomach so that he could neither eat nor drink
-with benefit. Nevertheless," adds Condivi, "he
-did not give up until he was so learned and rich
-in such knowledge that he intended to write a
-treatise on the movements of the human body,
-its aspect, and concerning the bones, with an
-ingenious theory of his own, devised after long
-practice."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo has been accused by some critics,
-not wholly without reason, of having somewhat
-ostentatiously availed himself of his anatomical
-knowledge. In some figures of his <i>Last Judgment</i>,
-for instance, the muscular masses, the
-bones and tendons and other anatomical details
-are hardly concealed by the skin, as if he had
-painted from the <i>subject</i> on the dissecting-table
-rather than from the living model. The result
-is undoubtedly striking and terrible, and we may
-even hazard the conjecture that the master
-purposely exaggerated his efforts in a picture
-representing the final resuscitation of the flesh, the
-awesome reconstruction and starting back into
-life of bodies long since reduced to dust. This
-"stupendous defect," if such it may be called,
-is far more apparent in Michelangelo's frescoes
-than in his works of sculpture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Having taken the human frame as the highest
-possible standard of beauty, Michelangelo made
-use of it in all his works not only as the principal
-theme, but as a decorative element. The ceiling
-of the Sistine Chapel, with its magnificent nude
-Athletes and allegorical figures, is the apotheosis
-of the human frame as the noblest means of
-decoration. By introducing nude figures in his
-tondo of the <i>Holy Family</i> and by his powerful
-but utterly unconventional treatment of the
-angels and saints in the <i>Last Judgment</i>, Michelangelo
-once more affirmed his faith in the beauty
-and purity of the "human form divine" as a
-decorative element of religious art. He went
-even further, for in a letter to Cardinal Ridolfo
-da Carpi, which he wrote when engaged on the
-construction of St. Peter's, Michelangelo hazards
-the strange theory that the study of the human
-figure is indispensable not only to sculptors and
-painters, but to architects as well: "For it is very
-certain that the members of architecture depend
-upon the members of man. Who is not a good
-master of the figure, and especially of anatomy,
-cannot understand it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's system of working was as
-powerful and original as his art. Before he began
-a statue he could already discern the finished
-masterpiece lurking within the rough-hewn block
-of marble, which he would attack with reckless
-assurance, great splinters flying in all directions
-as he feverishly cut away the waste stone, and
-saw the figure spring slowly into life under his
-magic chisel. A contemporary, writing in 1550,
-when Michelangelo, then seventy-five years of
-age, was carving the <i>Pietà</i> which he intended for
-his tomb, thus describes the master at his work:
-"I have seen him, although over seventy years of
-age and no longer strong, cut away more
-splinters from a block of very hard marble in
-fifteen minutes than three young men could have
-done in a couple of hours, and with such fierce
-recklessness that I thought the whole work must
-fall to pieces. For he knocked off splinters the
-size of a hand, following the line of his figures so
-closely, that the slightest mistake would have
-irreparably spoilt the whole group."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In one of his finest sonnets Michelangelo
-mentions this wonderful gift of the true artist to
-penetrate dull marble and to perceive, as through
-a veil, the perfect work of art within:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- Non ha l' ottimo artista alcun concetto<br>
- Ch' un marmo solo in se' non circoscriva<br>
- Col suo soverchio; e solo a quello arriva<br>
- La mano che ubbidisce all' intelletto.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Even such colossal works as the <i>David</i> were
-carved by Michelangelo directly from the marble,
-without previously modelling a full-size clay
-figure. In none of his finished masterpieces,
-however, is it possible to observe Michelangelo's
-methods better than in the unfinished statue of
-Saint Matthew, now in the Academy, Florence,
-which, although little more than a rough-hewn
-block of marble, already reveals all the power
-and beauty of the perfect work of art. When
-quarrying marble at Carrara for the façade of
-San Lorenzo, he could tell to a nicety the exact
-measurements of the blocks required, although
-he had not yet prepared a model or even
-accurate drawings to guide him in his work. The
-whole monument was already complete, even to
-its minor details, in his mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo followed the same strenuous
-methods in painting. We have seen that the
-first part of his most colossal work, the vault of
-the Sistine Chapel, comprising three hundred
-and ninety-four figures, the majority ten feet high,
-was begun on May 10th, 1508, and finished on
-November 1st, 1509. Indeed, as Michelangelo
-may be said to have only commenced work in
-earnest about the beginning of January 1509, after
-dismissing his incapable assistants, it is far more
-probable that the stupendous fresco was painted
-in two hundred and thirty-four days, at the rate
-of more than one figure a day. The artist could
-only paint on the plaster while it was wet, so that
-it is easy to tell in how many days he finished
-the larger figures by observing the divisions of
-the separate days' plasterings. For instance, Sir
-C. Holroyd, whose judgment is thoroughly to be
-depended upon, maintains that "one of the
-largest and most prominent figures, as well as one
-of the finest and most finished, the Adam in the
-Creation of Man, was painted in three sittings
-only. The lines of the junctions of the plaster may
-be seen in a photograph; one is along the collar
-bone, and one across the junction of the body
-and the thighs. There is also a division all round
-the figure, an inch or so from the outline, so we
-know that the beautiful and highly finished head
-and neck were painted in one day; the stupendous
-torso and arms in another; and the huge
-legs, finished in every detail, in a third. Such
-power of work and of finish is utterly inconceivable
-to any artist of to-day."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo rightly attributed his capacity
-for rapid and finished work to the great pains he
-had taken in thoroughly mastering the difficult
-art of drawing. There is a sketch in the British
-Museum with the following piece of advice in
-Michelangelo's own hand, to his pupil, Antonio
-Mini:
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- <i>Disegna Antonio, disegna Antonio, disegna, e non perder tempo.</i><br>
- Draw Antonio, draw Antonio, draw, and do not lose time.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-074"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-074.jpg" alt="CENTRAL GROUP OF THE LAST JUDGEMENT.">
-<br>
-CENTRAL GROUP OF THE LAST JUDGEMENT.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Like Donatello, he used to say to his pupils:
-"I give you the whole art of sculpture when I
-tell you&mdash;<i>draw</i>!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although it would be difficult to decide
-whether he excelled most in painting or in
-sculpture, Michelangelo, with singular modesty,
-persisted in regarding himself as exclusively a
-sculptor. Even when engaged on his greatest
-pictorial works, such as the frescoes of the
-Sistine Chapel, he invariably signed his letters
-with the words: Michelangelo, Scultore. It is,
-therefore, not surprising that his paintings, and
-more especially his earlier works, were conceived
-in a purely sculptorial spirit, and carried out
-according to the methods of his favourite art.
-The <i>Holy Family</i>, now in the Uffizi, for instance,
-differs but little in treatment and composition,
-from the two marble <i>tondi</i> in the Bargello, and
-in the Royal Academy, and from what we know
-of the famous <i>Cartoon of Pisa</i>, it is evident that
-Michelangelo, when composing that famous
-masterpiece, was influenced by the antique
-bas-reliefs, representing battle scenes, which he had
-seen and admired during his first visit to Rome.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That he did not consider himself a painter is
-further shown by his utter disregard for colour,
-so apparent in his earlier paintings, such as the
-<i>Holy Family</i>. But in the Sistine Chapel he
-ceases to regard perfection of form as all sufficient,
-and the sculptor suddenly becomes the greatest
-colour-painter of any age. For in these stupendous
-frescoes, remarkable for their imposing, yet
-extremely simple colour scheme, Michelangelo
-has succeeded in making colour serve a higher
-purpose than that of merely clothing his inspiration
-with beautiful tints. Colour is no longer an
-accessory, but an integral factor as important as
-the mighty figures, the inner meaning of which
-it helps to bear out, and the result of as much
-thought and care. In no other work of art has
-such perfect harmony of form and colour ever
-been attained.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo was so entirely absorbed in his
-art, to the exclusion of every other thought or
-passion, that it is possible to trace in his works
-not only the gradual development of his genius,
-but also the vicissitudes of his long and stormy
-career. Of his youthful works only two, the
-bas-relief of the <i>Madonna and Child</i> in the
-Buonarroti Collection and the <i>St. John</i> in the Berlin
-Museum, bear evident traces of Donatello's
-influence; in the <i>Battle of the Centaurs</i> and
-<i>Lapithae</i> the young artist already asserts his
-powerful individuality, and the <i>Bacchus</i> shows how
-thoroughly he had become imbued with the
-spirit of antique art. It was not until he carved
-the deeply religious group of the <i>Pietà</i> that he
-revealed his spiritual personality, while in the
-<i>David</i> we are first confronted with that
-<i>terribilita</i> which is the most striking characteristic of
-his subsequent works. All Michelangelo's
-masterpieces, whether of sculpture or painting, are
-instinct with power and strength, like combatants
-in some fierce, mysterious battle; but whereas
-the youthful David appears to breathe forth a
-triumphant defiance, his later conceptions, such
-as the brooding athletes of the Sistine Chapel,
-the Louvre captives writhing in their bonds, the
-sombre giants of the Medicean tombs, and the
-terror-stricken figures of the <i>Last Judgment</i>,
-appear to be weighed down and overshadowed by
-the consciousness of inevitable doom. What was
-formerly a brave, fearless fight becomes a
-hopeless struggle of Titans against Fate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sublimity of conception, grandeur of form,
-and breadth of manner are the elements of
-Michelangelo's style. As painter, as sculptor, as
-architect he attempted&mdash;and above any other
-man succeeded&mdash;to unite magnificence of plan
-and endless variety of subordinate parts with the
-utmost simplicity and breadth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His line is uniformly grand; character and
-beauty are admitted only as far as they can be
-made subservient to grandeur. The child, the
-female, even meanness and deformity, are by
-him indiscriminately stamped with grandeur. A
-beggar rises from his hand the patriarch of
-poverty; the hump of his dwarf is impressed
-with dignity; his women are moulds of generations;
-his infants teem with the man; his men
-are a race of giants. In that sublime circle of
-the Sistine Chapel which exhibits the origin, the
-progress and the final dispensations of theocracy,
-he may be regarded as the inventor of Epic
-painting.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among the glorious titles which have borne
-the name of Michelangelo to so high a pitch of
-celebrity, the least popular is that derived from
-the composition of his poetical works. The best
-judges, however, regard these productions with
-profound esteem. For Michelangelo lived during
-the "golden age" of the Lingua Toscana, and
-among the poets who filled the interval between
-the publication of the <i>Orlando</i> and that of the
-<i>Aminta</i>&mdash;first, in order of date, of the poems of
-Torquato Tasso&mdash;not one has raised himself
-above, nor, perhaps, to the level of Michelangelo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's architectural works reveal the
-same characteristics which excite our admiration
-when contemplating his paintings or his marbles,
-namely, simplicity and grandeur. Although he
-always protested that architecture, like
-painting, was not his profession, he stood head and
-shoulders above Bramante or any other architect
-of his time, and the majestic cupola of the
-greatest temple in Christendom is a sufficient
-proof of his genius.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although Michelangelo left no school in the
-narrower sense of the word, his influence upon
-art, and, what is even more important, on the
-minds of men, has undoubtedly been greater
-than that of any other master, and successive
-generations will agree with an illustrious
-contemporary, Ariosto, in proclaiming him
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- Michel, più che mortal, Angel divino.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It is difficult to grasp all the sublime
-significance of Michelangelo's works, even
-when we find ourselves face to face with the
-actual masterpieces, such as the frescoes of the
-Sistine Chapel or the beautiful statues which
-adorn the Medicean tombs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To attempt an accurate description of his
-principal works within the narrow limits at our
-disposal would be indeed a hopeless task, especially
-as the size of these pictures will only allow
-of their conveying a somewhat remote idea of
-the grandeur and awe-inspiring dignity which
-are the principal characteristics of Michelangelo's art.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In selecting the following eight illustrations,
-we have endeavoured not only to give an idea
-of Michelangelo's gradual artistic development,
-but also to throw some light on his powerful
-and most interesting personality. Although the
-<i>Portrait</i> now in the Capitol Museum is in many
-respects inferior to the one in the Uffizi, and has
-even fewer claims to the honour of being
-regarded as by the master's own hand, we have
-selected it because it tallies perfectly with the
-descriptions which Michelangelo's contemporaries,
-and more especially Condivi and Vasari,
-have left us of the master's rugged and expressive
-features. There is an aspect of profound
-melancholy, almost of discouragement, in the
-wan face, disfigured by the flattened nose; the
-eyes are sunk deep under the massive and
-somewhat slanting brow, and the whole picture has
-an indescribably mournful, hopeless expression.
-It was probably painted when Michelangelo was
-about fifty-five years of age, and the tragedy of
-the tomb was causing him bitter grief and
-disappointment. In the Uffizi portrait the most
-interesting feature is the hand, strangely resembling
-an eagle's talon and immediately giving the
-impression of strong individuality and creative
-power, which were Michelangelo's most striking
-characteristics.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-It has been rightly observed that nothing
-closes the fifteenth century so fitly as the
-magnificent marble group of <i>The Pietà</i>, which, although
-carved by Michelangelo in 1498, already
-prophesied the power of sixteenth-century art.
-Numerous other artists had already been attracted
-by the pathetic theme of the Virgin Mother
-mourning over her dead Son, their principal aim,
-however, being almost invariably to convey as
-forcibly as possible to the beholder the grief and
-despair of the bereaved Mother. With characteristic
-originality Michelangelo departed from
-the traditional manner, successfully endeavouring
-to give the theme a simpler but far more
-dignified and lofty interpretation. The Madonna
-is seated on the stone upon which the Cross is
-erected, with her dead Son on her lap. Her
-beautiful face is not contracted with grief, but
-wears an expression of sublime peace and
-resignation, and the graceful head reclines slightly
-on her right shoulder, as if pitying Heaven had
-sent sleep to temper the extremity of her grief,
-and sweet dreams of the past, when the Virgin
-Mother fondled her Infant Son, had mercifully
-cancelled the horrible vision of the Redeemer's
-lifeless body now lying on her lap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's contemporaries criticised the
-figure of the Madonna, remarking that the
-Mother is far too young compared with the Son.
-"One day," writes Condivi, "as I was talking
-to Michelangelo of this objection, 'Do you not
-know,' he said, 'that chaste women retain their
-fresh looks much longer than those who are not
-chaste? And I tell you, moreover, that such
-freshness and flower of youth, besides being
-maintained in her by natural causes, it may
-possibly be that it was ordained by the Divine
-Power to prove to the world the virginity and
-perpetual purity of the Mother. It was not necessary
-in the Son, but rather the contrary, wishing
-to show that the Son of God took upon himself
-a true human body subject to all the ills of man,
-excepting only sin. Do not wonder then that I
-have, for all these reasons, made the most Holy
-Virgin, Mother of God, a great deal younger in
-comparison with her Son than she is usually
-represented. To the Son I have allotted His full
-age.'" This grave theological statement gives us
-an interesting insight into Michelangelo's pious
-and meditative character, showing how earnestly
-he took his art and how reverently he thought
-out every detail, especially when interpreting
-some religious theme.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The figure of the dead Redeemer is, if possible,
-even more admirable than that of the Mother.
-"He is of so great and so rare a beauty," exclaims
-Condivi, "that no one beholds it but is moved
-to pity. A figure truly worthy of the humanity
-which belonged to the Son of God." No other
-sculptor has ever succeeded in giving marble the
-absolute <i>abandon</i> of death quite so pathetically
-as Michelangelo has done in this <i>Dead Christ</i>.
-Here it was that his profound knowledge of
-anatomy, and the long hours spent over the
-dissecting table at Santo Spirito, first stood him
-in good stead. In the Albertina Gallery at
-Vienna there is a magnificent study of a subject
-placed in almost exactly the same position as the
-Dead Christ, which the sculptor evidently
-transferred to <i>The Pietà</i>, if indeed he did not make
-the sketch expressly for this group. Although
-Michelangelo always professed to be a sculptor
-and nothing else, he shows all a true painter's
-sensitive appreciation of light and shade in this
-work, having so arranged the graceful, but
-somewhat complicated folds of the Madonna's
-draperies, as to form a comparatively dark background
-which enhances the whiteness of the lifeless body
-lying on her lap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To students of Michelangelo's art this work
-is especially interesting as it shows the master
-equally free from the influence of his Florentine
-predecessors, and from that of the antique.
-Michelangelo was conscious of the merit and of
-the originality of this group, for it is the only
-one which he considered worthy of bearing his
-great name.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-084"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-084.jpg" alt="THE PIETÀ.">
-<br>
-THE PIETÀ.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>David</i>, now in the Accademia at Florence,
-inaugurates the series of Michelangelo's colossal
-statues. It will be remembered that the master
-undertook to utilize a huge block of marble
-already rough-hewn by an unskilful sculptor,
-and that he succeeded in hewing this magnificent
-statue, without adding any other piece at
-all, so exactly to the size that the old surface of the
-marble may still be seen on the top of the head
-and in the base. What most surprises the modern
-artist when studying not only this, but all
-Michelangelo's colossal works, both in painting
-and in sculpture, is the perfect finish of every
-detail. The fearless eyes, the shapely ear, the
-firm set mouth, the powerful hand nervously
-grasping the death-dealing missile, could not
-have been more carefully modelled in a statuette,
-and casts of each individual limb are still set
-before students to copy and admire in every
-studio of the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In 1501, when Michelangelo began this work,
-he was still free and unfettered, justly proud of
-the fame which his <i>Pietà</i> had brought him, and
-with the world literally at his feet. This young
-giant boldly taking aim at an unknown but
-formidable enemy, might well be regarded as an
-allegorical representation of the artist himself,
-on the eve of grappling with his fate. It may
-be taken for certain that a quarter of a century
-later he would have interpreted the same theme
-very differently, and would perhaps have given
-us David the King, or David the Psalmist and
-the Prophet, instead of this magnificent
-embodiment of conscious power and hope. The fierce
-frown, the expression of strenuous force victoriously
-struggling against overwhelming odds, all
-those characteristics, in short, which have been
-summed up in the word <i>terribilità</i> by his
-contemporaries, would have been replaced by the
-sombre majesty of the <i>Moses</i>, or the despairing
-expression of conquered, impotent strength which
-is the key-note to such works as the Medicean
-Tombs, the Louvre Captives, and the <i>Last
-Judgment</i>. Critics casting about for an artistic
-derivation of Michelangelo's earlier works
-maintain that the <i>David's</i> face bears a resemblance
-to the features of Donatello's Saint George in Or
-San Michele, but the type is far more virile and
-energetic, recalling, if anything, the masterpieces
-of ancient art.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>tondo</i> representing <i>The Holy Family</i>, now
-in the Tribuna of the Uffizi, is doubly interesting
-as a work of art and as an instance of Michelangelo's
-fearless originality. It was painted about
-the year 1503 for that Florentine merchant prince,
-Angelo Doni, who sat for his portrait to the
-divine Raphael. Although Signorelli had once
-before introduced nude figures as a decorative
-element in a Madonna and Child which he
-painted for Lorenzo de' Medici (and it is
-possible that Michelangelo saw this picture), no
-other artist of the Renaissance had ever dared
-to interpret a sacred subject such as the Holy
-Family in so Pagan a spirit. An ancient Greek
-would quite naturally have supposed the beautiful
-group in the foreground to represent Juno
-playing with the infant Bacchus, only wondering,
-perhaps, why the artist had neglected to place a
-garland of vine leaves and clustering grapes
-round the Wine God's curly head. St. Joseph
-might easily be taken for a momentarily uxorious
-Jupiter or for a sober Silenus, and the nude
-shepherds idling in the background place the
-scene in a pleasant corner of Arcadia, while a
-grinning little Faun does duty for St. John the
-Baptist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nevertheless there is not the slightest hint at
-irreverence; it is merely a Pagan translation, by
-a master hand, of an oft-repeated Christian
-theme, a transposition as beautiful and as
-harmonious in its way as the original score.
-Indeed, Vasari tells us that Michelangelo painted
-this strikingly original <i>tondo</i> merely "to show
-his skill," and the magnificent modelling and
-foreshortening of the Madonna's arms, the
-masterful composition, and the wonderfully accurate
-drawing more than achieve his object. As to
-the colouring, he entirely disregarded it in his
-sculptor's pride. He might as well have carved
-this remarkable work in marble. Before painting
-the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo
-appeared to be wilfully colour-blind, as if afraid
-that painting would wile him away from the
-sister art, to which he had plighted his troth.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-There is very little doubt that the original
-design of the <i>Creation of Man</i> was inspired in
-Michelangelo by one of the antique gems which
-he admired as a boy in Lorenzo de' Medici's
-collection. A similar origin may be assigned to
-the group of Judith and her maid, also in the
-Sistine Chapel, to several of the Athletes, and
-to the Leda and the Swan which he painted for
-the Duke of Ferrara. But this magnificent
-recumbent figure of Adam far surpasses anything
-in ancient as well as in modern art, and is
-indeed a worthy centre round which the remaining
-stupendous compositions appear to gravitate like
-planets round the sun. It is here, more than
-in any other of his works, that we can appreciate
-Michelangelo's wonderful gift of interpreting
-the highest and most inaccessible themes in a
-simple yet imposing manner. Resting heavily
-on the curved surface of the globe, his powerful
-limbs and finely modelled flesh clearly outlined
-against the indigo blue of the sky and the
-solemn lines of the landscape, Adam gives one
-the impression of a huge primeval being instinct
-with strength which he is as yet unable to
-understand or to use, and just awaking into life, a
-divine spark of which he receives from the Deity.
-Michelangelo's conception of God the Father, as
-an old but powerful and majestic figure, has
-ever since remained the only possible pictorial
-symbol of so lofty a subject.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-088"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-088.jpg" alt="THE HOLY FAMILY.">
-<br>
-THE HOLY FAMILY.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from its great artistic merit, a pathetic
-interest attaches to the statue of <i>Moses</i> because
-it represents the last act of that tragedy of the
-tomb which darkened the greater part of Michelangelo's
-life, and influenced his art more than
-any other circumstance of his eventful career.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The leader and law-giver of the Hebrews is
-seated in an attitude of thought and wisdom,
-holding under his right arm the tables of the
-law, and supporting his chin with his left hand,
-like one tired and full of cares. His beard
-escapes in long waves between the fingers of his
-right hand. The hands and strong bare arms of
-the <i>Moses</i> are magnificent, beyond comparison
-the finest ever modelled by Michelangelo. The
-expression of the face is one of commanding
-power and almost fierce energy, a face capable of
-inspiring terror rather than love, a veritable
-embodiment of the cruel, uncompromising Hebrew
-legislation. The powerful, massive form is clearly
-apparent beneath the beautiful folds of the
-draperies, for here, as in all Michelangelo's clothed
-figures, whether in painting or in sculpture, dress
-does not hide but almost enhances the shape
-and beauty of the body. "This statue alone,"
-exclaimed the Cardinal of Mantua, when he saw
-the finished work, "is enough to honour the
-memory of Pope Julius."
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-090"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-090.jpg" alt="THE MOSES.">
-<br>
-THE MOSES.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-In the Medicean tombs Michelangelo may
-be said to have equalled if not surpassed the
-masterpieces of ancient sculpture. We have
-selected the tomb of Lorenzo de' Medici for
-our illustration, as the statues which adorn it,
-symbolizing <i>Evening</i> and <i>Dawn</i>, although
-conceived in the same spirit of profound melancholy,
-are, if possible, even more beautiful than
-the Day and Night of Giuliano's tomb. <i>Evening</i>
-is represented by an old man, brooding and
-dejected, but hardly less powerful and muscular
-than the giant Day. It is evident that he is not
-suffering from bodily fatigue, but that he is
-sinking under the weight of some unbearable,
-irremediable calamity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The virgin <i>Dawn</i> is perhaps the most beautiful
-female figure of modern or of ancient art.
-She is represented as only half awake and almost
-unable to rise from her couch, while there is a
-suggestion of ineffable bitterness in the expression
-of the face with its half-closed eyes wearily
-greeting another day of sorrow. The powerful
-yet graceful limbs are magnificently modelled,
-and the whole figure may be regarded as the
-perfection of the female form, redeemed from
-any breath of sensuality by a commanding
-loftiness of expression, such as the Greeks gave to
-the statues of their goddesses.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Michelangelo's <i>Last Judgment</i> is a work of
-so colossal a nature that it would be impossible
-to give even a remote idea of the whole
-composition in this unpretentious little book. We
-have therefore selected for our illustration the
-central group representing Christ the Judge, a
-dread figure enthroned on clouds, with hand
-upraised in an attitude of stern command,
-surrounded by the Blessed, who press round the
-Son of God with eager, frightened looks and
-gestures, as if hardly secure of their final
-salvation in that terrible day of retribution, "cum vix
-Justus sit securus." Nestling timorously close to
-her Son, half sitting, half crouching, with head
-averted, as if to avoid seeing the coming wrath,
-and arms crossed on her bosom, is the Mother
-of God, a wonderfully sweet and pathetic figure,
-full of pity and sorrow for the condemned souls,
-and contrasting strangely with the inexorable
-Judge rising in his stern majesty to pronounce
-sentence on the frightened, shuddering mass of
-humanity. The action of the Judge, and indeed
-every part of the composition, forcibly remind
-us of the <i>Last Judgment</i> in the Campo Santo of
-Pisa, but there is not a figure or a detail in the
-whole of this colossal work which does not bear
-the imprint of that powerful originality and
-that wonderful gift to express the most varied
-emotion and to interpret the loftiest themes,
-which were the principal characteristics of
-Michelangelo's genius.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-LIST OF CHIEF WORKS
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VIENNA, ALBERTINA GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Several drawings and sketches.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BELGIUM
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BRUGES, CHURCH OF ST. BAVON.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Marble group of Virgin and Child. (Executed
- at Carrara in 1506 for two Flemish merchants.)<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-BRITISH ISLES
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LONDON, NATIONAL GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- No. 790, Entombment. Unfinished painting on
- wood. (Between 1501-1504.)<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-ROYAL ACADEMY, DIPLOMA GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Madonna and Child. Tondo bas-relief (1501-1504).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LONDON, BRITISH MUSEUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Several drawings.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-OXFORD, TAYLOR COLLECTION.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Drawings.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-FRANCE
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-PARIS, LOUVRE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Two colossal statues of Captives, originally
- intended for the tomb of Julius II. (1513).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Numerous drawings, including Head of Faun.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LILLE, MUSÉE WICAR.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Drawings.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-GERMANY
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BERLIN MUSEUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Statue of youthful St. John the Baptist (about 1495).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-WEIMAR MUSEUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Drawings and studies for the Last Judgment.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-HOLLAND
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-HAARLEM, TEYLER MUSEUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Many important drawings.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-ITALY
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BOLOGNA, CHURCH OF SAN DOMENICO.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Statue of kneeling Angel (1494).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-FLORENCE, ACCADEMIA.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Colossal statue of David (1501-1504).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Statue of St. Matthew (unfinished).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BUONARROTI COLLECTION.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Madonna and Child (bas-relief), 1489-1492.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Fight between Centaurs and Lapithae (bas-relief), 1489-1492.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Numerous sketches, studies, architectural drawings
- and three hundred autograph letters.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-DUOMO.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Unfinished group representing "The Deposition from the Cross."<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MUSEO NAZIONALE.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Statue of Bacchus (executed in 1497 for
- Jacopo Galli).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Dying Adonis (1501-1504).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Apollo (unfinished statue, executed in 1530
- for Baccio Valori).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Victory (group intended for Julius II.'s Tomb,
- 1521).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Bust of Brutus (1544?).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHURCH OF SAN LORENZO.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Medicean Tombs (begun 1521).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- New Sacristy and Library of San Lorenzo.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-UFFIZI GALLERY.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- The Holy Family (tondo in oil-colours, painted
- for Angelo Doni in 1503).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Numerous drawings, including <i>The Resurrection
- of Lazarus</i>, <i>Prudence</i>, the <i>Last Judgment</i>.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-BOBOLI GARDENS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Four Slaves (unfinished statues).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-ROME, ST. PETER'S.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Group of La Pietà (1499).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHURCH OF SANTA MARIA SOPRA MINERVA.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Statue of the Saviour (1521).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHURCH OF SAN PIETRO IN VINCOLI.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- Tomb of Julius II. and statue of Moses (completed 1545).<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VATICAN, SISTINE CHAPEL.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- The Creation and Fall of Man (1508-1512). &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; }<br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;} Frescos.<br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Last Judgment (1535-1541). &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; }<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-PAULINE CHAPEL.
-</p>
-
-<p>
- The Conversion of St. Paul. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; } Frescoes<br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;} (1542-49).<br>
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Martyrdom of St. Peter. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; }<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.<br>
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br><br></p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MICHELANGELO ***</div>
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