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    Biography: Michelangelo (Annotated)

    By Romain Rolland

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    CONTENTS
    PAGE
    INTRODUCTION xi
    CHAPTER I
    --CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH (1475-1505) 1
    CHAPTER II
    --MICHELANGELO AND JULIUS II (1505-1512) 26
    CHAPTER III
    --THE FAILURE OF THE GREAT PLANS (1513-1534) 45
    CHAPTER IV
    --VITTORIA COLONNA (1535-1547) 80
    CHAPTER V
    --OLD AGE AND DEATH (1547-1564) 108
    CHAPTER VI
    --THE GENIUS OF MICHELANGELO AND HIS INFLUENCE ON ITALIAN ART 142
    CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE 169
    CATALOGUE OF THE PRINCIPAL WORKS OF MICHELANGELO IN PUBLIC COLLECTIONS 175
    NOTE ON THE DRAWINGS 179
    BIBLIOGRAPHY 181
    INDEX 185

    LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
    Portrait of Michelangelo by Marcello Venusti. (Capitoline Museum, Rome.) Frontispiece
    FACING PAGE
    Pietà. (St. Peter's, Rome.) 14
    David. (Accademia delle Belle Arti, Florence.) 18
    The Holy Family. Painted for Agnolo Doni. (National Gallery, London.) 22
    The Almighty Creating the Sun and the Moon. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 30
    The Creation of Man. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 36
    The Prophet Ezekiel. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 40
    The Libyan Sibyl. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 46
    The Prophet Jeremiah. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 50
    The Erythrean Sibyl. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 58
    Jesse. A Figure in the Series of the "Ancestors of Christ." (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 64
    Decorative Figure. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 70
    Decorative Figure. (Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.) 76
    Sketch for the Tomb of Julius II. Drawing. (Uffizi, Florence.) 84
    Slave. Figure for the Tomb of Julius II. (Louvre.) 94
    Moses. Figure for the Tomb of Julius II. (San Pietro-in-Vinculi, Rome.) 104
    Tomb of Giuliano de Medici. (Chapel of the Medici in San Lorenzo, Florence.) 114
    Dawn. Figure from the Tomb of Lorenzo de' Medici. (Chapel of the Medici in San Lorenzo, Florence.) 122
    Twilight. Figure from the Tomb of Lorenzo de' Medici. (Chapel of the Medici in San Lorenzo, Florence.) 130
    Christ and the Saints. Detail from The Last Judgment. (Sistine Chapel.) 138
    Charon's Boat. Detail from The Last Judgment. (Sistine Chapel.) 146
    The Resurrection. Drawing. (Louvre.) 152
    The Dome of St. Peter's. From the Original Model in Wood. (Preserved in the Vatican.) 158
    The Descent from the Cross. (Duomo, Florence.) 164

    INTRODUCTION
    The life of Michelangelo offers one of the most striking examples of the influence that a great man can have on his time. At the moment of his birth in the second half of the fifteenth century the serenity of Ghirlandajo and of Bramante illuminated Italian art. Florentine sculpture seemed about to languish away from an excess of grace in the delicate and meticulous art of Rossellino, Disiderio, Mino da Fiesole, Agostino di Duccio, Benedetto da Maiano and Andrea Sansovino. Michelangelo burst like a thunder-storm into the heavy, overcharged sky of Florence. This storm had undoubtedly been gathering for a long time in the extraordinary intellectual and emotional tension of Italy which was to cause the Savonarolist upheaval. Nothing like Michelangelo had ever appeared before. He passed like a whirlwind, and after he had passed the brilliant and sensual Florence of Lorenzo de' Medici and Botticelli, of Verocchio and Lionardo, was ended forever. All that harmonious living and dreaming, that spirit of analysis, that aristocratic and courtly poetry, the whole elegant and subtle art of the "Quattrocento," was swept away at one blow. Even after he had been gone for a long time, the world of art was still whirled along in the eddies of his wild spirit. Not the most remote corner was sheltered from the tempest; it drew in its wake all the arts together. Michelangelo captured painting, sculpture, architecture and poetry, all at once; he breathed into them the frenzy of his vigour and of his overwhelming idealism. No one understood him, yet all imitated him. Every one of his great works, the David, the cartoon for the war against Pisa, the vault of the Sistine Chapel, the Last Judgment, St. Peter's, dominated generations of artists and enslaved them. Fro
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