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Impact Of Michelangelo

How does michelangelo impact society today?

i know that is a tough question... many people recognize michelangelo's name but they don't know which artworks he made or when he lived.

so how does he impact society today? for some reason, art historians and artists are rather obsessed with him as a person. he left behind quite a few poems and letters, from which we know a lot about what he was like. He's one of the first artists that we know SO much about... because just 50 or 100 years before his time, artists didn't even sign thier works. in fact, he may have been one of the first to do so. .. though i can't find a source for that.

The renaissance was THE FIRST time that artists were known as individuals. before then, they were craftspeople, whose names were rarely attached to thier work and rarely were they celebrated or paid well. Michelangelo had 2 biographies written about him WHILE HE WAS STILL ALIVE. in the renaissance, artists were well known and paid well to make art for the vatican or important families like the demedici. Today we still venerate the individual... we still love to read about artists, maybe not everybody reads about sculptors, but actors, actresses, and movie directors are artists too. we actually take it to great excess. Wouldn't you say in today's society that artists should "find their own unique voice"? this was hardly valued at all just a generation before michelangelo.

the other way he impacts society, i think, is in being skilled at many things. he was an architect, a painter, a sculptor, a poet. he wrote sonnets before shakespeare did. generations of people have looked to people like michelangelo and davinci, and this is where the term "renaissance man" comes from... someone who is well-rounded and talented at many things.

How does Michelangelo impact on the world today? What improvements did he make on society? What world view element did he help change?

I would start your assignment mentioning Goethe: "Until you have seen the Sistine Chapel, you can have no adequate conception of what man is capable of accomplishing".
Michelangelo was a fervent Catholic in a period when the Catholic Church was really important, worked for Popes and bankers, but at the same time he was homosexual and he believed in the man, his talent and intelligence. He was not the first humanist, but for sure he was the most famous. Humanism and the Renaissance are the start of the modern "western culture", based on the human being as the center of interest: this means freedom, democracy, capitalism, achieving your personal needs. Michelangelo's David was the statue of Liberty for the Republic of Florence. His frescoes in the Sistine chapel gave, and still give, a very different view on the divine aspect, at least very different than the iconic divinities traditionally represented in the gothic age. He also changed arts forever: for the meaning we give to the word "artist" today, Michelangelo was the first artist in history and all the other ones were "artisans". Michelangelo is the first in history to represent "himself": his passion, anxiety, extasy. He also had an impact on society: artists became more important thanks to him: as humble as he was in his daily life, he didn't even allow the Pope or nobody else to discuss his works.
I wrote an exhaustive article on Michelangelo's life recently: http://florenceitaly-attractions.com/michelangelo-buonarroti-father-master-arts/
I hope my suggestions and the article help you somehow. Good luck with your assignment!

What was "MICHELANGELO'S" impact 2 Society?

He is the epitome of the High Renaissance style, for that his impact on art history is very strong and he will continue to be remembered as one of the greatest artists of all time.

What impact did Michelangelo have on modern society?

Not being an art expert but willing to pose as one, I believe he married a high level of realism in his sculpture with the existing idealism, and this was the bar set for art for several centuries afterwards (up to impressionism).But the most important thing he did was to expand the scope of the common man:he was illegitimate and poor.He rose by his genius at a manual craftHe was as well know for his technique as the ideas embodied in his workAccording to the movie with Charlton Heston and Rex Harrison, he argued with a pope, thus announcing his equality to the nobs.To sum it up he was a revolutionary bastard.

What impact did Michelangelo have on the Renaissance world and today?

well im not sure about impact but i do know that the main thing he liked doing was sculpting and was upset when he was pulled off aproject to paint the sistine chapel. in the pieta and the sculpture of moses he wanted to show people a different side to the story. in the pieta he took a normally mournful scene and made it beutiful.

Why is Michelangelo still important today?

To try and put into perspective your question from past to present, I will try my best to answer your question. Unlike today, Michelangelo had so little to work with, but his work stands up in brilliant fashion to scrutiny, centuries later. A true mark of excellence. When you consider where he did his best work. On the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The working conditions, where grim to say the least. A Catholic Chapel is dimly lit, oval architecture which presents a complication to the viewer, looking up. A depression, a dip, a hill upside down. Michelangelo was able to produce art in a 3 dimensional fashion to overcome the natural challenges of his very real "brick and mortar" canvass.

And finally, his art is theologically relevant to the Church and this relevancy has shaped some of the best religious minds we have seen and heard in the pulpit. Michelangelo's masterpiece has been more than a spark fo imagination, but rather a flame of fire that reflects the enlightenment of his era. The Sistine Chapel was not his only work, however, it is a culmination of his body of work that exudes the passion of his craft to send a message. Everyman in his nakedness can reach for the divine touch of God's hand. From Creature to Creator, their is something special and for some mystical the hand of God.

Michaelangelo's work lends itself to interpretation because of the rich texture of his work centuries ago. He is considered a Master, because his art work said so many things to so many people and remains relevant to this very day to the religious community and the world of Art. Perhaps it was him who sought to touch the hand of God.

What impact did Michelangelo have on society today and during the Renaissance?

His abilities as a painter and sculptor were unsurpassed in his day. While many studied under him and assisted him with the painting of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, and sculpting many of his marble creations, none equaled him as an artist.

I believe his most auspicious contribution was giving the Christian faith it's concept of what God looked like. The fresco's of the Sistine Chapel depict his version of God, possibly modeled after the Greek God Zeus, the act of Creation, the depiction of angels, the saints and all the mythology surrounding the stories in the Bible, have had a long lasting and misguided impact of the Christian religion. While beautifully restored and magnificent as it is, the depictions have permanently affected the thinking and belief system in Christendom. His paintings inspired other artists to depict death and suffering, hell and heaven, battles of evil and good with headless and bloody bodies strewn across tapestries and huge canvases. Having seen these first hand it was apparent that while the the progressive technical aspects of art were advanced, the subject matter was seriously, in the view of many,
not of the happiest moments in Christianity. The subject matter was dark, evil and sinister. His constant battle with the Pope was classic for the time. But his contribution as the most recognized art in the world still outshines all other criticisms.

Hope this helped a little

Which is the only signed work of Michelangelo?

Michelangelo signed only one work. It was the Pieta. Mary and Jesus at his death.He signed this work because it was one of his early works. He was influenced by overhearing a conversation. He heard viewers question the identity of the artist. It was answered incorrectly with the name of someone other than him: Christoforo Solari.He got upset then. Across the sash on Mary's chest he wrote by way of chisel:Michaelangelo Bonarroti, Florentine, made this. In Italian of course.He was said to have regretted his actions and pride and swore to never sign another piece.Pan in and you can kind of see it. It was a little overdone. Poor guy. He was having a bit of a hard time in his earlier career.CK

What is the importance of Michelangelo in history?

Michelangelo left one of the great artistic legacies of all times…a total body of work that encompasses painting, sculpture, architecture, and even poetry. He was more than a Renaissance man; he defined the term!But his greatest contribution was to the humanity of art. He did not just depict the human form…he glorified it. All of his creations:. The Pieta, the David, the figure of God in the Sistine; they all bulge with defined musculature, with curves, and with a vital humanity not present in art prior to his time.This was the essence of the Italian Renaissance : movement from the depiction of men and gods as merely symbols without underlying form, to a broad acceptance of man as the model of all things, to whom God gave jurisdiction over the world. Michelangelo should be praised for his technical competence in the mediums he chose…but his major influence was his contribution to the Romantic, heroic, depiction of MAN as the greatest creation of God.

What were Michelangelo's greatest works and why?

Based on the number of people who crowd around/under Pieta, David, Moses, and the Sistine Chapel you can argue those are his greatest works, and many would agree. Pieta because of his ability to convey quiet sadness over the death of a son (ignore for a second that it is Mary holding Jesus and the grief of a mother becomes center stage).David came into fame because it was one of the first statues to show the consternation of David as he prepared to go up against Goliath rather than David actively fighting or victorious over his defeated foe.  Though word of warning, David looks a little cartoon-ish in person since his head and hands are larger than what should be proportionate - this was because the statue was originally commissioned to be on top of the Duomo in Florence and thus viewed looking up at it.Moses is my personal favorite and it's because of his ability to express movement with Moses' beard, the ability to carve marble in a way that looks like cloth ready to tumble over the exposed knee.  And that knee, who knew a person can get so excited about a knee, but while most people focus on the veined detail of his arms, it's the knee that creates a blink and you'll think you're looking at a living person moment.  And like Pieta, Michelangelo was able to create real expression into the face of Moses.  The Sistine Chapel is often chosen as his greatest work, the scope and enormity of the undertaking is not to be undermined, but after the excessive  20 year cleaning done in the name of restoration, the colors are almost garish and resemble a comic book rather than showcase the amazing ability to play with light and shadow that characterized his painting technique.

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