ISBN-13: 9783565214532 / Angielski / Miękka / 184 str.
Michelangelo Buonarroti created the Sistine Chapel ceiling, David, and the Pietà-but his letters and contracts reveal a man consumed by anxiety, family obligations, and battles with popes who treated him as a tool rather than an artist. This biography traces how personal turmoil and institutional power shaped his art between 1475 and 1564, moving beyond the myth of solitary genius to examine the human decisions behind each masterpiece.Drawing on Michelangelo's correspondence, papal archives, and contemporary accounts, the narrative follows his transformation from a Florentine stonecutter's apprentice to the most sought-after artist in Europe. It explores how financial pressure from his brothers drove him to accept commissions he resented, how Pope Julius II's military ambitions dictated the tomb project that haunted him for 40 years, and how his sexuality and spiritual doubts emerged in Sistine Chapel frescoes and late sonnets.The book reexamines familiar works through biographical context: the terribilità in Moses reflected his fury at contractual disputes, the unfinished Slaves embodied his sense of being trapped by patronage, and the Rondanini Pietà revealed his final reckoning with mortality and faith. It traces how Michelangelo navigated Rome's political violence, Florence's republican collapse, and Counter-Reformation pressures while maintaining artistic integrity.Relevant for readers interested in how creativity emerges under constraint, how institutional power shapes cultural production, and how personal vulnerability coexists with public achievement.
Michelangelo's letters reveal what his sculptures hide: a man who saw himself as enslaved by patrons, family debt, and the very talent that made him indispensable.