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  MICHELANGELO

  AND THE POPE’S CEILING

  ROSS KING

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  ePub ISBN 9781446418833

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  Published by Pimlico 2006

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  Copyright © Ross King 2002

  Ross King has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work

  This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

  First published in Great Britain in 2002 by

  Chatto & Windus

  First Pimlico edition published in 2003

  Pimlico

  Random House, 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road,

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  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN 9781844139323

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  For Melanie

  Contents

  COVER

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT

  DEDICATION

  LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

  MAP OF ITALY

  MAP OF ROME

  1. The Summons

  2. The Conspiracy

  3. The Warrior Pope

  4. Penance

  5. Painting in the Wet

  6. The Design

  7. The Assistants

  8. The House of Buonarroti

  9. The Fountains of the Great Deep

  10. Competition

  11. A Great Quandary

  12. The Flaying of Marsyas

  13. True Colours

  14. Rejoice Greatly, O Daughter of Zion

  15. Family Business

  16. Laocoön

  17. The Golden Age

  18. The School of Athens

  19. Forbidden Fruit

  20. The Barbarous Multitudes

  21. Bologna Redux

  22. The World’s Game

  23. A New and Wonderful Manner of Painting

  24. The First and Supreme Creator

  25. The Expulsion of Heliodorus

  26. The Monster of Ravenna

  27. Many Strange Forms

  28. The Armour of Faith and the Sword of Light

  29. Il Pensieroso

  30. In Evil Plight

  31. Final Touches

  EPILOGUE: THE LANGUAGE OF THE GODS

  PICTURE SECTION

  NOTES

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  INDEX

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  List of Illustrations

  BLACK AND WHITE ILLUSTRATIONS

  1. The Piazza Rusticucci, detail from View of the Borgo Alessandrino, by G. A. Dosio (Uffizi, Florence)

  2. Michelangelo, by Nicolas de Larmessin (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  3. A sixteenth-century copy of the lower portion of one of Michelangelo’s designs for the tomb of Julius II (Uffizi, Florence)

  4. Giuliano da Sangallo, by Piero di Cosimo (AKG, London)

  5. Donato Bramante, by Nicolas de Larmessin (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  6. Pope Julius II, by Locatelli (Getty Images)

  7. The Vatican at the end of the fifteenth century, by Wolgemut, from Hartmann Schedel’s ‘Liber Chronicarum’ Nuremberg 1493 (Fotomas Index)

  8. A plan of the Vatican showing Bramante’s improvements, by Reginald Piggott

  9. A reconstruction of the exterior of the Sistine Chapel, from Ernst Steinmann Die Sixtinische Kapelle (Tafeln, Erster Teil, Munich, 1901)

  10. A reconstruction of the interior of the Sistine Chapel, from Ernst Steinmann Die Sixtinische Kapelle (Tafeln, Erster Teil, Munich, 1901)

  11. The Battle of Cascina after Michelangelo, c.1542 (oil on panel) by Antonio da Sangallo, the elder (Collection of the Earl of Leicester, Holkham Hall, Norfolk/Bridgeman Art Library)

  12. A sketch for The Battle of Anghiari, by Leonardo da Vinci (Accademia, Venice)

  13. The ceiling of the Camera degli Sposi, Palazzo Ducale, Mantua, by Andrea Mantegna (Scala)

  14. A sketch of what the scaffold for the Sistine Chapel might have looked like, by Michelangelo (Uffizi, Florence)

  15. Drawing of a ceiling from Hadrian’s villa at Tivoli, by Giuliano da Sangallo (Biblioteca Comunale, Siena)

  16. A detail from an early design for the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (British Museum, London)

  17. Francesco Granacci, from Vasari’s Le vite de’ più eccelenti pittori, scultori e architettori, ed. Bettarini and Barocchi, 6 vols (Florence: Sansoni 1966–87)

  18. Sketch for the Libyan Sibyl, by Michelangelo (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1924)

  19. Girolamo Savonarola, by Esme de Boulonois (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  20. A plan of the Vatican Apartments, by Reginald Piggott

  21. Self portrait, by Raphael (Scala)

  22. The Temptation, by Raphael, from the ceiling of the Stanza della Segnatura (Vatican)

  23. Leda and the Swan, by Raphael, after Leonardo da Vinci (The Royal Collection © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II)

  24. Apollo and Marsyas, by Sodoma, from the ceiling of the Stanza della Segnatura

  25. King Louis XII of France, engraved by Allais after Chasselat (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  26. Study for the head of the Prophet Zechariah, by Michelangelo (Uffizi, Florence)

  27. Drapery study for the Erythraean Sibyl, by Michelangelo (British Museum, London)

  28. Study for a female figure, by Michelangelo (Casa Buonarroti, Florence)

  29. Sketch of a male nude, by Michelangelo (Louvre/©Photo RMN – C. Jean)

  30. The Laocoön, engraving by an unknown artist (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  31. Manuscript of Michelangelo’s poem to Giovanni da Pistoia (Archivio Buonarroti, Florence)

  32. Desiderius Erasmus, by Andre Thevet (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  33. Frontispiece to the German edition of Desiderius Erasmus’s Julius exclusus (1st Latin edn. 1517), 1523 (Bayerische Staatsbibliotheck, Munich)

  34. Cartoon for The School of Athens, by Raphael (Ambrosiana, Milan)

  35. Alfonso d’Este, Duke of Ferrara, by Andre Thevet (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  36. Lodovico Ariosto, engraving by an unknown artist (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  37. Frontispiece to a 1524 edn of Ariosto’s Orlando furioso (British Library, London)

  38. Martin Luther, by Theodore De Bry (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  39. Study for Adam in The Creation of Adam, by Michelangelo (British Museum, London

  40. The pensieroso, Raphael’s addition to The School of Athens (Vatican)

  41. The Creation of Adam, by Paolo Uccello, in the Chiostro Verde, Santa Maria Nove
lla, Florence (Alinari)

  42. The Creation of Adam, by Jacopo della Quercia, on the Porta Magna, San Petronio, Bologna (Alinari)

  43. The Battle of Ravenna, by the Maestro della Trappola, 1530 (Gabinetto Nazionale Delle Stampe, Rome)

  44. Booz, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  45. A detail showing the Swiss soldiers from The Mass of Bolsena, by Raphael (Vatican)

  46. Niccolò Machiavelli, engraving by Hinchliff after Brunzoni (Mary Evans Picture Library)

  47. Studies for the crucified Haman, by Michelangelo (British Museum, London)

  48. Tomb of Julius II, San Petronio in Vincoli, by Michelangelo (Alinari)

  COLOUR PLATES

  1. A plan of the Sistine Chapel ceiling, Reginald Piggott

  2. The Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  3. The ROBOAM/ABIAS lunette from the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  4. The Giving of the Keys to St Peter, by Perugino (Vatican)

  5. The NAASON lunette from the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  6. The JOSIAS/JECHONIAS/SALATHEIL lunette and spandrel from the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  7. The Prophet Jonah, from the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo (Vatican)

  8. Portrait of Pope Julius II, by Raphael (Scala)

  9. The Dispute of the Sacrament, by Raphael (Vatican)

  10. The School of Athens, by Raphael (Vatican)

  11. The Expulsion of Heliodorus, by Raphael (Vatican)

  12. The Mass of Bolsena, by Raphael (Vatican)

  13. Triumph of Galatea, Villa Farnesina, by Raphael (Scala)

  1

  The Summons

  THE PIAZZA RUSTICUCCI was not one of Rome’s most prestigious addresses. Though only a short walk from the Vatican, the square was humble and nondescript, part of a maze of streets and densely packed shops and houses that ran west from where the Ponte Sant’Angelo crossed the River Tiber. A trough for livestock stood at its centre, next to a fountain, while on its east side was a modest church with a tiny belfry. Santa Caterina delle Cavallerotte was too new to be famous. It housed none of the sorts of relics – bones of saints, fragments from the True Cross – that each year brought thousands of pilgrims to Rome from all over Christendom. However, behind this church, in a narrow street overshadowed by the city wall, there could be found the workshop of one of the most sought-after artists in Italy: a squat, flat-nosed, shabbily dressed, ill-tempered sculptor from Florence.

  Michelangelo Buonarroti was summoned back to this workshop behind Santa Caterina in April 1508. He obeyed the call with great reluctance, having vowed he would never return to Rome. Fleeing the city two years earlier, he had ordered his assistants to clear the workshop and sell its contents, his tools included, to the Jews. He returned that spring to find the premises bare and, nearby in the Piazza San Pietro, exposed to the elements, a hundred tons of marble still piled where he had abandoned them. These lunar-white blocks had been quarried in preparation for what was intended to be one of the largest assemblages of sculpture the world had ever seen: the tomb of the reigning pope, Julius II. Yet Michelangelo had not been brought back to Rome to resume work on this colossus.

  Michelangelo was thirty-three years old. He had been born on 6 March 1475, at an hour, he informed one of his assistants, when Mercury and Venus were in the house of Jupiter. Such a fortunate arrangement of the planets had foretold ‘success in the arts which delight the senses, such as painting sculpture and architecture’.1 This success was not long in coming. By the age of fifteen, the precociously gifted Michelangelo was studying the art of sculpture in the Garden of San Marco, a school for artists fostered by Lorenzo de’ Medici, the ruler of Florence. At nineteen, he was carving statues in Bologna, and two years later, in 1496, he made his first trip to Rome, where he soon received a commission to sculpt the Pietà. His contract for this statue boldly claimed it would be ‘the most beautiful work in marble that Rome has ever seen’2 – a condition he was said to have fulfilled when the work was unveiled to an astonished public a few years later. Carved to adorn the tomb of a French cardinal, the Pietà won praise for surpassing not only the sculptures of all of Michelangelo’s contemporaries but even those of the ancient Greeks and Romans themselves – the standards by which all art was judged.

  1. The Piazza Rusticucci, with the Castel Sant’Angelo in the background.

  2. Michelangelo.

  Michelangelo’s next triumph had been another marble statue, the David, which was installed in front of the Palazzo della Signoria in Florence in September 1504, following three years of work. If the Pietà showed delicate grace and feminine beauty, the David revealed Michelangelo’s talent for expressing monumental power through the male nude. Almost seventeen feet in height, the work came to be known by the awestruck citizens of Florence as Il Gigante, or ‘The Giant’. It took four days and considerable ingenuity on the part of Michelangelo’s friend, the architect Giuliano da Sangallo, to transport the mighty statue the quarter-mile from his workshop behind the cathedral to its pedestal in the Piazza della Signoria.

  A few months after the David was finished, early in 1505, Michelangelo had received from Pope Julius II an abrupt summons that interrupted his work in Florence. So impressed was the Pope with the Pietà, which he had seen in a chapel of St Peter’s, that he wanted the young sculptor to carve his tomb as well. At the end of February, the papal treasurer, Cardinal Francesco Alidosi, paid Michelangelo an advance of a hundred gold florins, the equivalent of a full year’s salary for a craftsman. The sculptor then returned to Rome and entered the service of the Pope.3 So began what he would later call ‘the tragedy of the tomb’.

  Papal tombs were usually grand affairs. That of Sixtus IV, who died in 1484, was a beautiful bronze sarcophagus that had been nine years in the making. But Julius, a stranger to all modesty, had envisioned for himself something on an entirely new scale. He had begun making plans for his sepulchre soon after his election to the papacy in 1503, ultimately conceiving of a memorial that was to be the largest since the mausoleums built for Roman emperors such as Hadrian and Augustus. Michelangelo’s design was in keeping with these tremendous ambitions, calling for a free-standing structure some thirty-four feet wide and fifty feet high. There were to be over forty life-sized marble statues, all set in a massive and highly detailed architectural setting of pillars, arches and niches. On the bottom tier a series of nude statues would represent the liberal arts, while the top would be crowned by a ten-foot-high statue of Julius wearing the papal tiara. Besides an annual salary of 1,200 ducats – roughly ten times what the average sculptor or goldsmith could expect to earn in a single year – Michelangelo was to receive a final payment of 10,000 more.fn1

  3. A copy of one of Michelangelo’s designs for the tomb of Julius II.

  Michelangelo had begun this daunting project with energy and enthusiasm, spending eight months in Carrara, sixty-five miles north-west of Florence, supervising the quarrying and transport of the white marble for which the town was famous, not least because both the Pietà and the David had been carved from it. In spite of several mishaps in transit – one of his cargo boats ran aground in the Tiber and several others were swamped when the river flooded – by the start of 1506 he had transported more than ninety wagonloads of marble to the square before St Peter’s and moved into the workshop behind Santa Caterina. The people of Rome rejoiced at the sight of this mountain of white stone rising in front of the old basilica. No one was more excited than the Pope, who even had a special walkway built to connect Michelangelo’s workshop with the Vatican and thereby facilitate his visits to the Piazza Rusticucci, where he would discuss his magnificent project with the artist.

  Even before the marble had arrived in Rome, however, the Pope’s attentions were being distracted by an even larger enterprise. Originally, he had planned for his sepulchre to stand in a church near the Colosseum, San Pietro in Vincoli, only to change his mind and decide it sho
uld be installed instead in the grander setting of St Peter’s. But soon he realised that the old basilica was in no fit state to accommodate such an impressive monument. Two and a half centuries after his death in AD 67, the bones of St Peter had been brought from the catacombs to this location beside the Tiber – the spot where he was believed to have been crucified – and the basilica that bears his name constructed over them. By a sad irony, this great edifice housing the tomb of St Peter, the rock on which the Christian Church was founded, therefore came to occupy a low-lying patch of marshy ground in which, it was said, there lived snakes large enough to eat babies whole.

  These undesirable foundations meant that, by 1505, the walls of the basilica were leaning six feet out of true. While various piecemeal efforts had been made to rectify the perilous situation, Julius, typically, decided to take the most drastic measures: he planned to have St Peter’s demolished and a new basilica built in its place. The destruction of the oldest and holiest church in Christendom had therefore started by the time Michelangelo returned from Carrara. Dozens of ancient tombs of saints and previous popes – the inspiration for visions, healings and other miracles – were smashed to rubble and enormous pits twenty-five feet deep excavated for the foundations. Tons of building materials cluttered the surrounding streets and piazzas as an army of two thousand carpenters and stonemasons prepared themselves for the largest construction project seen anywhere in Italy since the days of ancient Rome.

  A design for this grand new basilica had been put forward by the Pope’s official architect, Giuliano da Sangallo, Michelangelo’s friend and mentor. The 63-year-old Sangallo boasted an impressive list of commissions, having designed churches and palaces across much of Italy, among them the Palazzo Rovere, a splendid residence that he built in Savona, near Genoa, for Julius II. Sangallo had also been the favourite architect of Lorenzo de’ Medici, for whom he designed a villa near Florence at Poggio a Caiano. In Rome, he was responsible for making repairs to the Castel Sant’Angelo, the city’s fortress. He had also repaired Santa Maria Maggiore, one of Rome’s most ancient churches, and gilded its ceiling with what was said to be the first gold ever brought back from the New World.