The Creation of Adam (detail), 1508-12, Michelangelo. The hand of God touching Michelangelo's? |
Having promulgated a list of the "Greatest" paintings ever painted, maybe here
at the end I should mention the criteria I've used in doing so. First of all,
the overall quality of the work, not just for its time but for all time was
considered. How does the work rate gauged beside both previous and later work?
Second the influence of the individual painting and that of the artist in
general over later artists. Did the work have a lasting impact on the course of
art history? And third, I considered the various works and their popular
standing among those who appreciate art but are not "absorbed" by it as are
artists and art historians. The list admittedly has some tendency to be more
heavily weighted by "modern" works simply because there are so many more
paintings and painters in the modern era and with the increased pace and ease of
communication now as compared to the distant past, they've had a much greater
impact on us as artists today.
Sistine Chapel Ceiling, 1508-12, Michelangelo: "I'm a sculptor, not a painter." |
In choosing Michelangelo Buonarroti's
Sistine Chapel Ceiling (above) as the greatest painting of all time, I could not help
but consider the fact that it is the almost universally beloved and admired
painting in the world, especially in the light of its restoration a few years
ago. Moreover, it is not merely one, but a whole art gallery of over a dozen
major masterpieces, (and scores of minor ones) brilliantly composed into a
massive, permanent, one man show of the highest caliber, painted under the most
miserable physical circumstances imaginable. Despite its prodigious
population of nude and semi-nude figures, even school children are aware of its
story of Genesis told in such expressive splendor as to be "awesome" in the
current adolescent vernacular. At the time of its completion, school children
weren't the only ones who found the work awe-inspiring. Thanks to the
restoration efforts, only in this era can we get a feeling for the truly awesome
impact this incredible spectacle must have had on clergy and laity
alike.
The Temptation of Eve (detail) 1508-12, Michelangelo. Michelangelo, the misogynist? |
The Drunkenness of Noah, 1509-12, Michelangelo Nude sons mocking their father's nudity. |
The Creation of the Sun, Moon, and Plants, 1508-12, Michelangelo. God moves on; He was a busy man. |
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