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  1. Sep 27, 2010 · It wasn’t really true what Vasari says, that Michelangelo earned all his money by the sweat of his brow. Rich patrons gave him presents. Pope Julius sent him 500 ducats once just to make up for clobbering him with his staff. Cardinal Ippolito de’ Medici on one occasion, “having heard that a beautiful Arab horse of his had taken ...

  2. The 34-year-old Michelangelo was renowned for such statues as David and the Pietà, and he regarded his Sistine Chapel commission from Pope Julius II with the utmost suspicion. In fact he believed ...

    • Pope Julius II and Michelangelo - Tough Love
    • Painting The Ceiling of The Sistine Chapel
    • Michelangelo and The Sistine Chapel - The Last Judgement

    Pope Julius II was the nephew of Pope Sixtus IV, and wasa man to be reckoned with. He was nicknamed "the warrior pope" because he actually went to battle defending Rome and the papacy. Pope Julius II decided Michelangelo should build his tomb. And it was to be monumental, literally. It was going to be so grandiose that both the Pope and Michelangel...

    how the project began

    Michelangelo had honed his drawing skills in Ghirlandaio's workshop. He had also learned a little bit about fresco painting by assisting more experienced fresco artists. But he still saw himself primarily as a sculptor, and that is the work he loved most. He never wanted to paint. So, when Michelangelo finally accepted the job to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling, he brought a few trusted artists from his native Florenceto work with him, partly to help him get started with this technique.

    the scaffolding

    Obviously, Michelangelo would need some sort of scaffolding. Bramante and his assistants built scaffolding to Michelangelo's specifications. It was a flat, wooden platform that came out from the side walls high up near the tops of the windows. Contrary to the romantic idea of Michelangelo lying on his back to paint the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo actually stood on his scaffolding while he painted. Think about doing this for four years. It caused Michelangelo tremendous neck and back strain,...

    Ceiling Elements

    Michelangelo had a daunting task ahead of him. How to fill a 6,000 square feet expanse? Certainly the most admired section of the ceiling today is the vault in the center with its nine panels from the Old Testament. The panels are divided into three sections, each with three paintings. They represent: 1. The Creation of the Heavens and Earth 2. The Creation of Adam and Eve (Humankind) 3. Noah and the Great Flood

    What happened next

    In September 1534, only days before his death, Pope Clement VIIcommissioned Michelangelo to paint the back wall behind the altar of the Sistine Chapel. Preparations for the wall began in 1535, and Michelangelo painted the wall under the jurisdiction of Pope Paul III (Farnese), between 1536 and 1541. Times had changed. In the years after Michelangelo's frescoes on the ceiling were finished, much had happened in Rome, Italy, and Europe and Michelangelo's outlook on life had grown darker. This w...

    the meaning of the Last JudgEment

    The entire wall behind the altar of the Sistine Chapel is covered with Michelangelo's Last Judgment. The Last Judgmentshows the second coming of Christ and the final judgment of those doomed to hell or being sent to heaven. The painting shows Christ in the middle, with his mother Mary next to him, surrounded by the 12 apostles. Altogether there are over 300 figures, with nearly all the males and angels originally shown as nudes. The painting shows souls saved and rising toward heaven on the l...

  3. Dec 19, 2023 · Michelangelo was paid well for his time, earning 400 florins. A skilled worked might earn 50 florins a year; a government official 100-200 florins a year. David quickly became an emblem of civic pride. Michelangelo brought honor to his city and to his family, something that was central to his values.

  4. Jan 4, 2008 · Michelangelo then covered the ceiling with hundreds of figures and worked for at least two years; and was finally paid, according to both biographers, three thousand ducats. Something is wrong somewhere. He must have received much, much more. If he hadn’t, the reader of his letters would have heard a wail ascend to heaven, sure.

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  6. Oct 23, 2022 · How Much Was Michelangelo Paid for the Sistine Chapel? Michelangelo was paid 3,000 ducats for painting the Sistine Chapel. That may sound like a lot, but it’s quite a low sum for such a massive and time-consuming project. In today’s money, 3,000 ducats would be worth about $450,000.

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