Michelangelo Drawings: Closer to the Master

Michelangelo Drawings: Closer to the Master

by HugoChapman (Author)

Synopsis

Michelangelo, the greatest of Renaissance artists, was active as a sculptor, painter and architect. Aside from a few unfinished paintings and a handful of marbles north of the Alps, his genius can only be appreciated outside of Florence and Rome through his work as a draughtsman. This exhibition and book combine the best examples from the British Museum with studies of comparable quality from the Ashmolean Museum, and also from the small but very high-quality holdings of the Teyler Museum. An introductory discussion covers topics such as Michelangelo's life and contemporary fame, his training and choice of drawing technique, and the history of his drawings after his death. The book is then structured chronologically around the various important projects that punctuated the artist's career, illustrating the way in which his ideas evolved in the creation of such iconic works as the two Sistine Chapel frescoes. Each stage in his life is set against the backdrop of the continually changing political situation, Michelangelo's patrons, and the pupils and contemporary artists whom he so heavily influenced. The book includes colour illustrations of 90 drawings in the show, as well as comparative illustrations of the finished works and related studies showing their evolution.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: British Museum Press
Published: 06 Mar 2006

ISBN 10: 0714126489
ISBN 13: 9780714126487

Media Reviews
The catalog . . . is really an artistic biography told through the drawings, but with several informative sidelights.. -Ingrid D. Rowland, New York Review of Books -- Ingrid D. Rowland New York Review of Books
Author Bio
Hugo Chapman is curator of Italian drawings before 1800 at the British Museum. He is author of Padua in the 1450s: Marco Zoppo and his Contemporaries (1998) and co-author of Old Master Drawings from the Malcolm Collection (1996) and Drawings by Correggio and Parmigianino (2000).