Sistine Chapel Essay

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    Michelangelo Buonarroti; the powerful and inspirational artist Art, architecture and poetry among other creativity-based subjects have been around for well over half a millennium. However, artistic history can never be complete without mentioning one iconic artist whose reputation has lasted over five centuries now. Michelangelo di Lodovico Bounarroti-Simoni was born on March 6, 1475, in Caprese, Italy, born to a middle class family, which thrived on banking business. He was more interested in painting

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    Michelangelo Buonarroti is one of the most famous sculptors, painters, architects, and poets during the high renaissance. He is mostly known for his sculpture of David and his fresco (plaster) painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Michelangelo lived a very intriguing life and had a huge impact on art as we see it today. Michelangelo was viewed as a patron of the Mannerism movement. His work of art conveyed an alternate style to this era. What used to be a more moderate style turned into

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    Raphael’s Bible compared to Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel Arguing that Raphael’s Bible was meant to physically and theoretically fill a spare gap in the Vatican’s representation of the bible requires deepening our appreciation of the Sistine Chapel. Indeed, one could think that there is no big difference between these two masterpieces since Michelangelo also depicts the Old Testament: nevertheless, it is by looking at the choice of scenes and stories represented in both stories that the differences

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    modernity of western civilization in master works of art, music and literature. Artistic brilliance secured in the disciplines they practiced influencing generations that will follow. One such story is of Sistine Chapel ceiling painting. Located in the Vatican, Italy by 1477 a new renovation of the chapel was begun by Pope Sixtus IV lasting until 1480. He employed famous artists of the day such as Pietro Perugino, Sandro Botticelli, Domenico Ghirlandaio and Pinturicchio who painting the walls with fresco

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    painters were commissions insisted by the Pope which rendered high significance from one another. Michelangelo’s triumphed in the Sistine Chapel (1508-1512) and Raphael’s gem, Stanze di Raffaello (Raphael Rooms). A story was said to believe that Raphael, at the time, were painting frescos and was deeply inspired by Michelangelo’s paintings. He had accessed the Sistine Chapel still in its making without the consent on Michelangelo and later scraped his frescos of the wall to paint and repainted it, imitating

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    Despite that he created numerous masterpieces, his works demonstrated high level of skills and innovative content. His style that formed in Florence was exposed to Classical art and humanist thought. For instance, the paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo painted the scenes in reverse chronological order, and the complexity of figures presents a relaxed and relived mood. Besides, he emphasized the power inherited in the human body, especially torso. David is a example in this case

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    Objective: Michelangelo best represents the Renaissance period due to his artistic abilities that exemplified individualism through his extraordinary ability to showcase emotion and great skill in his artwork which enlightened people. Experience: 1475-1488 Caprese, Italy He is raised by a foster mother. The mother dies when he is six years old. He did have anyone to look up to, so he quit school

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    The Temptations of Christ, is a gorgeous painting that hangs in the Sistine Chapel today. Its artist, Sandro Botticelli, was an Italian painter who had many famous works. Botticelli was born to a tanner in the city of Florence around the year 1444. He lived in relative comfort and at the age of fourteen he expressed a passion for painting to his father who helped him gain an apprenticeship with Fra Filippo Lippi. Lippi taught Botticelli many important aspects of art, as outline in one article; “[Lippi

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    Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni better known as Michelangelo is one of the greatest artistic geniuses of the Italian Renaissance or that every lived for that matter, some of his works include his sculpture of David, ceiling paintings of the Sistine chapel, and also the Pieta. Michelangelo was born in Caprese, Italy in 1475 to Leonardo di Buonarrota Simoni and Francesca Neri. During the time of his birth Michelangelo’s father was a magistrate in the town of Caprese but moved his family to Florence

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    Ross King’s Michelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling narrates the four years from 1508-1512 that Michelangelo spent laboring over the immense project handed to him; to fresco the 12,000 square foot ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome. King’s book describes the battles that Michelangelo faced; the internal struggles, political turmoil and rivalries among fellow artist that encompassed his surroundings. Michelangelo’s battles with his health, family problems, financial burdens, rival artists and the

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