INTRODUCTION
I. ON MICHELANGELO'S CHARACTER AS AN
ARTIST.Michelangelo's place in the world of art is altogether
unique. His supremacy is acknowledged by all, but is understood by
a few only. In the presence of his works none can stand
unimpressed, yet few dare to claim any intimate knowledge of his
art. The quality so vividly described in the Italian wordterribilitàis his predominant trait.
He is one to awe rather than to attract, to overwhelm rather than
to delight. The spectator must needs exclaim with humility, "Such
knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto
it." Yet while Michelangelo can never be a popular artist in the
ordinary sense of the word, the powerful influence which he
exercises seems constantly increasing. Year by year there are more
who, drawn by the strange fascination of his genius, seek to read
the meaning of his art.His subjects are all profoundly serious in intention. Life
was no holiday to this strenuous spirit; it was a stern conflict
with the powers of darkness in which such heroes as David and Moses
were needed. Like the old Hebrew prophets, the artist poured out
his soul in a vehement protest against evil, and a stirring call to
righteousness.Considered both as a sculptor and a painter, Michelangelo's
one vehicle of expression was the human body. His works are
"form-poems," through which he uttered his message to mankind. As
he writes in one of his own sonnets,"Nor hath God deigned to show himself elsewhereMore clearly than in human forms sublime."In his art, says the critic Symonds, "a well-shaped hand, or
throat, or head, a neck superbly poised on an athletic chest, the
sway of the trunk above the hips, the starting of the muscles on
the flank, the tendons of the ankle, the outline of the shoulder
when the arm is raised, the backward bending of the loins, the
curves of a woman's breast, the contours of a body careless in
repose or strained for action, were all words pregnant with
profoundest meaning, whereby fit utterance might be given to
thoughts that raise man near to God."Learning his first lessons in art of the Greeks, he soon
possessed himself of the great principles of classic sculpture.
Then he boldly struck out his own path; his was a spirit to lead,
not to follow. With the subtle Greek sense of line and form, he
united an entirely new motif. In contrast to the ideal of repose
which was the leading canon of the Greeks, his chosen ideal was one
of action. Moreover, he invariably fixed upon some decisive moment
in the action he had to represent, a moment which suggests both the
one preceding and the one following, and which gives us the whole
story in epitome. Thus in the David we see preparation, aim, and
action. It was a far cry from the elegant calm of the Greek god to
the restless energy of this rugged youth.Even with seated figures he followed the same principle.
Moses and the Duke Giuliano are ready to rise to their feet if need
be. In his frescoes we again find the same motif,—Adam rising to
his feet in obedience to the Creator's summons, and Christ the
Judge sweeping asunder the multitudes.In his love of action and his passion for the human form lay
the elements of his art most easily lending themselves to
exaggeration. That the master did indeed permit himself to be
carried beyond due limits in these matters is seen by comparing the
grandeur of the Sistine ceiling with the mannerisms of the Last
Judgment. The interval between was "the time of his best technical
and spiritual creativeness," when he produced the statues of the
Sacristy of S. Lorenzo.It was characteristic of Michelangelo's impetuous nature to
spend his enthusiasm upon the early stages of his work, and leave
it unfinished. This unfinished effect of many of his marbles seems
to bring us in closer touch with his methods as a sculptor. Nor is
a rough surface here and there inharmonious with the rugged
character of his conceptions. Moreover, as a critic[1]has pointed out, the polished
and rough portions enhance each other, giving a variety in the
light and shadow which is pictorial in effect.[1]See notes on the Life of
Michelangelo Buonarotti in the Blashfield-Hopkins edition of
Vasari.To a man of Michelangelo's austere temperament, intensely
masculine in his predilections, the beauty of womanhood was not
fully revealed. His sibyls can scarcely be counted as women; they
belong to a world of their own, neither human nor divine. It was
only in his few Madonnas that we can trace his feminine ideal, an
ideal noble and dignified, rather than beautiful. The Madonna of
the bas-relief is proud rather than tender, the Virgin of the Pietà
is grand rather than lovely. These were works of his youth. Later
in life, when he had known the blessing of a good woman's
friendship, he developed a new ideal in the gentle and delicate
womanhood of the Virgin of the Last Judgment.Michelangelo has been compared to two great masters of
dissimilar arts, Milton and Beethoven. There are striking points of
similarity in the men themselves, in stern uprightness of
character, in scorn of the low and trivial, in lofty idealism. The
art of all three is too far above the common level to be popular;
it requires too much thinking to attract the superficial. In
poetry, in music, and in sculpture, all three utter the profoundest
truths of human experience, expressed in grand and solemn
harmonies.II. ON BOOKS OF REFERENCE.The original materials for the study of Michelangelo's life
and work are the two biographies by his contemporaries, Vasari and
Condivi. Vasari's was the first of these (1550), and like the other
portions of his "Lives of the Painters" contained many
inaccuracies. It was to correct these that Condivi published his
little book a few years later. This rival effort aroused Vasari's
wrath, and after Michelangelo's death he issued an enlarged edition
of his own book, unscrupulously incorporating all that was valuable
in Condivi's work, and adding thereto many reminiscences of the
master's life. The fame of Vasari's monumental work caused
Condivi's little book to be entirely forgotten for long years, and
it has been one of the tasks of modern scholarship to restore it to
its true place. Even now, however, there is no available form of
Condivi's biography for American readers, though Vasari's "Lives"
in Mrs. Foster's translation is found in most libraries. The latest
edition of Vasari, published in 1897, contains annotations by Mr.
and Mrs. E.H. Blashfield, and A.A. Hopkins, which correct all the
statements in the light of recent authorities.Far more valuable even than the early biographies is the mass
of existing documents of the Buonarotti family, including
contracts, letters, poems, and memoranda, and containing data for a
full and exact biography of the master. Unfortunately, however,
this great storehouse of material has been for all these centuries
a sealed treasure, given up only little by little, to successive
generations of scholars. When Hermann Grimm wrote his celebrated
"Life of Michael Angelo" (in 1860), the only original material
accessible to him was the collection of letters in the British
Museum. His volumes are still read with interest and profit, though
it is to be regretted that they should be reprinted without any
editorial comments to connect formerly received opinions with later
conclusions. John S. Harford's "Life of Michael Angelo Buonarotti"
was published at about the same time as Grimm's work, that is, in
1857. It was in two volumes, and contained translations of many of
Michelangelo's poems, as well as material about Savonarola,
Vittoria Colonna, and Raphael. The work is found in the older
libraries, and is well worth studying, as the latter portion is
still valuable for all that refers to the architecture of St.
Peter's.Signor Gotti's "Vita," in 1875, was the first to profit to
any considerable degree by documentary researches. The conclusions
of this book are best known to the English-reading public through
Charles Heath Wilson's "Life and Works of Michelangelo Buonarotti"
(1876 and 1881), consisting of compilations from Gotti, to which
are added original investigations of the Sistine frescoes, which
are very valuable.More privileged than any of his predecessors was John
Addington Symonds, who, by special favor of the Italian government,
was allowed to examine the Buonarotti collection in Florence, so
long debarred to others. His "Life of Michelangelo Buonarotti" is
therefore unique in being, as the sub-title announces, "based on
studies in the archives of the Buonarotti family at Florence." It
was published in 1893 in two large, finely illustrated volumes, and
is taken as the latest authoritative word on the subject, a word
singularly independent of others' conclusions, and influenced by an
artistic and literary nature of rare sensitiveness.To those who wish briefer notices of Michelangelo's life and
work than any of these full biographies are recommended the
chapters on Michelangelo in Kugler's "Handbook of the Italian
Schools," in Mrs. Jameson's "Memoirs of the Italian Painters," in
Frank Preston Stearns's "Midsummer of Italian Art," in Mrs.
Oliphant's "Makers of Florence," and in Symonds's volume on "Fine
Arts" in the series "Renaissance in Italy."To understand more fully the character of the man
Michelangelo, the student should read his sonnets. There is a
complete collection translated by J.A. Symonds, while both
Wordsworth and Longfellow have translated a few.The life of Michelangelo has furnished material for two long
poems by American writers,—Longfellow's drama, and the poem by
Stuart Sterne. The former, which is annotated, is a well-balanced
study of the great artist's career and ideals.III. HISTORICAL DIRECTORY OF THE WORKS OF ART IN THIS
COLLECTION.Portrait frontispiece.An oil painting in The Hall of the Portraits of Old Masters,
Uffizi Gallery, Florence. The authorship of the painting is not
certainly known. Symonds says that "it may perhaps be ascribed with
some show of probability to Bugiardini." Bugiardini was a friend of
Michelangelo's youth and a fellow student in the gardens of the
Medici. That later in life he painted a portrait of his
distinguished friend we know from Vasari. Vasari tells us that the
portrait showed a peculiarity in the right eye, and this fact lends
probability to the identification of the Uffizi portrait with
Bugiardini's work.1.Madonna and
Child, an unfinished bas-relief
medallion, made, according to Vasari, during Michelangelo's
residence in Florence in 1501-1505. It was made for Bartolommeo
Pitti. It is now in the National Museum (Bargello),
Florence.2.David, a statue made from a block of Carrara marble which had been
spoiled by an unskilled sculptor. After it had lain useless in
Florence for a century, a sculptor applied to the board of works of
the cathedral for permission to use it. The board consulted
Michelangelo and offered him the marble. He undertook to cut from
it a single figure which would exactly use the block. The contract
to make the statue of David was drawn up in 1501, and the statue
was completed in 1504. Forty men were employed four days to remove
it from the cathedral works to the Piazza della Signoria, where it
was placed on the platform of the palace (Palazzo Vecchio),
remaining in the open air more than three centuries. The weather
was beginning to injure it, and it was removed in 1873 to the
Academy of Fine Arts in Florence, where it now stands.3.Cupid.Symonds gives the following account of the statue in the
"Life of Michelangelo," published in 1893: "Discovered some forty
years ago, hidden away in the cellars of the Gualfonda (Ruccellai)
Gardens, Florence, by Professor Milanesi and the famous Florentine
sculptor, Santarelli. On a cursory examination they both declared
it to be a genuine Michelangelo. The left arm was broken, the right
hand damaged, and the hair had never received the sculptor's final
touches. Santarelli restored the arm, and the Cupid passed by
purchase into the possession of the English nation." It is now in
the Museum of South Kensington.4.Moses, a statue on the tomb commemorative of Julius II.,[2] [...]