MICHELANGELO, THE GREAT FLORENTINE PAINTER
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Michelangelo's Work Methods
ANATOMY "Through dissection Michelangelo studied every known animal, and did so many human dissections that it outnumbers that of those who are professional in that field. This is a considerable influence that shows in his mastery in anatomy that is not matched by other painters." Life of Michelangelo, Ascanio Condivi. "From handling and dissecting corpses over such a long time, Michelangelo developed such a distaste for it that his stomach would not let him eat or drink with any satisfaction or joy. When he had finished with this practise of study, Michelangelo had collected such a thorough knowledge of the form and movement of human shape that he made in his mind an idea for the writing of a treatise. In this regard he spoke often with Messer Realdo Colombo, the surgeon and anatomist and Michelangelo's particular friend. Michelangelo's theory about bone structure, the appearance of the body and its movement, he desired to be written with the assistance of some learned man, so that it would benefit all those who would work in sculpture and painting."* Life of Michelangelo, Ascanio Condivi. * Realdo Colombo was Michelangelo's own doctor. He published a volume on anatomy in 1559, De re anatomica libri XV. It is considered by Michelangelo scholars that Condivi's notes on Michelangelo's theories of anatomy were given to Vincenzo Danti, who published the first (and only edition) of a proposed 14-volume book set on anatomy in 1567 titled Trattato delle perfette proporzioni. In the Life of Michelangelo Condivi book translated by Alice Sedgewick Wohl (Penn State Press, 1976, 2001) she writes that this book contains the "...the central thesis... that 'perfect proportion' is based on the use of the parts of the body as revealed through anatomy rather than on measurement - - a concept related to Michelangelo's objection to Durer's theory of proportion on the grounds that it does not take into account 'the movements and gestures of human beings.'" *Note: The above quotations from Condivi's Life of Michelangelo are my own paraphrases based upon the Wohl text & my other readings of Michelangelo.
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http://www.eeweems.com/michelangelo/recantation.html
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