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Bookmark: https://artcollection.carleton.edu/objects-1/info/578

Portrait of Michelangelo

14 3/8 in. x 8 3/4 in. (36.51 cm x 22.23 cm)

, Italian

Object Type: Sculpture and Installations
Creation Place: Europe, Italy
Medium and Support: high relief Castelline marble
Credit Line: Carleton College Art Collection, gift of James Woodward Strong, president 1870-1903
Accession Number: 1997.284
Michelangelo Buonarotti (1475-1564) needs no introduction as one of the greatest of Italian Renaissance artists. Even more than his contemporary Leonardo, he fashioned a persona for himself as a creative genious. What do we know about Michelangelo’s appearance? He acquired a broken nose during a teenage brawl.

Michelangelo would have strongly objected to the way this seventeenth-century relief improved on his appearance. With biographer Giorgio Vasari’s help, Michelangelo used his misshapen nose to shape an image of himself as ugly creator. His ugliness made him successor to all sorts of powerful, talented, unattractive forerunners, including the philospher Socrates and his artistic forebearer, the painter Giotto.

Nineteenth-century Romantics, including those who collected such marble relief portraits as these, exalted Michelangelo as the paradigm of the hero, comparablr in stature to Dante. They consider both masters of epic form.

What of Michelangelo’s connection with Savonarola? Did these nineteenth-century collectors realize that Michelangelo counted Savonarola’s sermons next to the Bible in the power of their impact on him in old age?

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