Transcript
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That's 20% off your first purchase with Code Short History at LiquidIV. It's 1509 in the Sistine Chapel, one of the most spectacular sacred places in Vatican City, the headquarters of the all powerful Roman Catholic Church. But there's nothing somber about the space today. It's bustling with activity as the assistants to the great artists working here rush about, attending to his demands. They mix paints, bring fresh brushes, and try to guess what he'll ask them for next to avoid angering him. High above them, suspended from the walls, are brackets supporting a system of walkways and platforms, and this is where the artist works. The irascible bearded man in his 30s, measuring no more than 5 foot 3, climbs up the last stretch of rickety ladder to the very top platform. Now 60ft up in the air, the apparatus creaks beneath him as he poses himself at a most unnatural angle. His spine is curved, his neck jutting backwards, so his face is pointed at the ceiling just above him. But moving around can be precarious, and as he settles, he nudges a loose plank. Before he can scramble to save it, it falls, crashing a second later onto the floor below. Someone lets out a cry as they duck out of its way. Luckily, no one is hurt this time. He raises his brush and gets back to it. His canvas is the entire ceiling. It's a vast expanse, around 12,000 square feet, and it is his job to cover every inch with biblical scenes. His aim is to astound all whose eyes fall upon it. As with all frescoes, the paint must be applied directly onto wet plaster, so his art dries into the body of the building itself he dabs with his brush, bringing forth the muscular torso of a man. But though the subject is beautiful, powerful, the artist's own face is etched deep with a grimace, and his entire body is wracked with pain. He's already been working on this project for months. Just getting the paint to stay on the ceiling has been challenge enough, what with mold infiltrating the plaster. A lump of dried material now dislodges itself and falls onto his face. He lets out a frustrated roar, then bellows down at one of his helpers far below to mix some more pigments. Suddenly, the door at the far end of the chapel swings open with a heavy creak. Footsteps echo through the chamber. The artist looks down and rolls his eyes at the sight of the visitor dressed in robes of red and white. It's the man who commissioned this vast enterprise, Pope Julius ii. As his entourage fuss around him, he begins to climb a ladder for a better look at the work, though it's far from being complete. He wants to open the chapel back up to the faithful so that they may wonder at the artistry. But the artist is having none of it. Descending from his platform, he tells the Pope that he will allow visitors only when he is satisfied. The Pope is infuriated by such insubordination. Who is he to say what should happen in the house of God? He raises the cane he carries and strikes out at the artist. But as soon as it begins, the altercation is over. The Pope has made his point. He makes his way back down the chapel and leaves. The artist rubs at his arm, but such is his constant pain. The. But in truth, he hardly notices the blow. He sighs, looks up, and starts the climb back to what he knows will be his masterpiece. Because the work is all that matters to the great Michelangelo. A child of a middling family from Florence, motherless by the age of six, Michelangelo became one of the giants of Renaissance art. Works like the Sistine Chapel and his sculpture of David continue to awe audiences and inspire artists. Amid the complex politics of the Italian peninsula, he navigated a path between a powerful dynasty and religious upheaval. To ensure that his art was always at the center of his life. And by pushing himself to the limits of his unsurpassable talents, whether working in paint or marble or as an architect or engineer, he became not only the artist of his age, but one of the great cultural touchstones of all time. But how did his relationship with the mighty Medici clan impact his career? What was behind his rivalry with superstar contemporaries like Leonardo da Vinci and Raphael. What drove him to keep producing outrageously brilliant work almost until his dying day? And at what cost to him personally? I'm John Hopkins from Noiser. This is a short history of Michelangelo. It's late March 1475 and in the small Tuscan town of Caprese near Florence, a wet nurse is settling down with an infant. The baby, Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni, is just three weeks old. His father, a government official, happens to be serving as Caprise's mayor. So the family are away from their native Florence for the time being. Michelangelo's wet nurse is the wife of a stonemason and in years to come, the artist will joke that he traces his sculptor's abilities to her milk. There is certainly no great artistic heritage in his own bloodline. When he is 6, his parents living back in Florence, his mother dies in childbirth, leaving a husband and five sons. Michelangelo is sent to grammar school where he receives grounding in reading, writing and maths. He seems set to follow his father into bureaucracy. But Michelangelo's focus frequently strays from his lessons to drawing, for which he shows a natural talent. Dr. Bernadine Barnes is formally a professor at Wake Forest University and author of three books on Michelangelo, including Michelangelo and the Viewer in His Time.
