This thesis argues that Michelangelo employed the grammar of the Cathedral and Prophet program in the making of his David with particular reference to Lorenzo Ghiberti's Gates of Paradise, Donatello's Jeremiah, Nanni di Banco's Isaiah, and Assumption of the Virgin above the Porta della Mandorla. Emphasizing Christological prophecy as the lynchpin of the overall sculptural program, it likewise applies humanist and Christian exegesis in order to reposition the David into its intended religious context. Raised on top of the Duomo, the David would have embodied the ancestral bloodline--emanating from the Tree of Jesse, carried through the womb of the Virgin Mary, and culminating in the incarnation of Christ. The incarnation--prophesied by Jerem...
* As the first approaching life-sized, freestanding, sensuous, bronze nude since Antiquity, Donatell...
Stefano da Putignano’s Trinity (1520) depicts Jesus on the cross placed between the legs of an enthr...
The subject of this article are the themes Michelangelo made (1532 - 1540?) for two of his life\u27s...
An examination of the meaning of some of Michelangelo\u27s work, particularly the Sistine Chapel
This dissertation examines the spiritual poetry of Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) in light of t...
Faculty Mentor: Mark Gregory Pegg In 1508 Pope Julius II summoned Michelangelo to Rome to paint the ...
In the present re-reading of the Sistine mosaics of S. Maria Maggiore, which embraces the Old and Ne...
Michelangelo’s marble sculpture of David is one of the most admired works of art in the world. It is...
This paper analyzes the secular and non-secular influences upon Michaelangelo\u27s art over the cour...
Between the mid 1520s and 1533, Michelangelo executed a group of drawings conceived as gifts for Ghe...
The thesis poses a question derived from an unlikely nexus of two prominent figures of the Renaissan...
It is a peculiar fact that almost every piece of artwork ever created has attached to it a piece of ...
Because a single theological interpretation of the Sistine Ceiling cannot be made, the ceiling is a ...
Donatello was one of the most celebrated sculptors of the Italian Renaissance. Donatello’s most famo...
Ask anyone to think of an image of David and they will almost certainly call to mind the sculpture b...
* As the first approaching life-sized, freestanding, sensuous, bronze nude since Antiquity, Donatell...
Stefano da Putignano’s Trinity (1520) depicts Jesus on the cross placed between the legs of an enthr...
The subject of this article are the themes Michelangelo made (1532 - 1540?) for two of his life\u27s...
An examination of the meaning of some of Michelangelo\u27s work, particularly the Sistine Chapel
This dissertation examines the spiritual poetry of Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) in light of t...
Faculty Mentor: Mark Gregory Pegg In 1508 Pope Julius II summoned Michelangelo to Rome to paint the ...
In the present re-reading of the Sistine mosaics of S. Maria Maggiore, which embraces the Old and Ne...
Michelangelo’s marble sculpture of David is one of the most admired works of art in the world. It is...
This paper analyzes the secular and non-secular influences upon Michaelangelo\u27s art over the cour...
Between the mid 1520s and 1533, Michelangelo executed a group of drawings conceived as gifts for Ghe...
The thesis poses a question derived from an unlikely nexus of two prominent figures of the Renaissan...
It is a peculiar fact that almost every piece of artwork ever created has attached to it a piece of ...
Because a single theological interpretation of the Sistine Ceiling cannot be made, the ceiling is a ...
Donatello was one of the most celebrated sculptors of the Italian Renaissance. Donatello’s most famo...
Ask anyone to think of an image of David and they will almost certainly call to mind the sculpture b...
* As the first approaching life-sized, freestanding, sensuous, bronze nude since Antiquity, Donatell...
Stefano da Putignano’s Trinity (1520) depicts Jesus on the cross placed between the legs of an enthr...
The subject of this article are the themes Michelangelo made (1532 - 1540?) for two of his life\u27s...