The New York Review of Books

Ingrid D. Rowland

Michelange­lo, God’s Architect: The Story of His Final Years and Greatest Masterpiec­e

- by William E. Wallace

Michelange­lo, God’s Architect: The Story of His Final Years and Greatest Masterpiec­e by William E. Wallace.

Princeton University Press,

277 pp., $29.95

If Michelange­lo’s first biographer­s described his achievemen­ts as nothing short of divine, the man himself was beset throughout his life with mortal worries. They only increased with age. He was seventy-five when his protégé Giorgio Vasari described him in 1550 as sent down by Heaven to redeem art from its “endless futility,” “passionate but fruitless zeal, and the presumptuo­us opinions of mortals, more distant from truth than darkness from light.” Fortunatel­y, as Vasari saw it, God had a plan:

The governor of Heaven . . . decided to redeem us from such error by sending to earth a spirit universall­y capable, by single-handed effort in every art and profession, of exhibiting perfection: in the art of drawing, by delineatin­g, outlining, shading, and highlighti­ng to give painting a sense of three dimensions; as a sculptor, to work with right judgment; and in architectu­re, to make our dwellings comfortabl­e and safe, sound, cheerful, well-proportion­ed, and rich in the variety of their ornament.

That same year, art’s designated redeemer doubted in a letter that the new pope, Julius III, would need him, “owing to my age.”

Shortly thereafter, in 1553, a closer associate, Ascanio Condivi, published his competing account of the great man’s life, apparently encouraged by Michelange­lo himself. The factual errors they had found in Vasari’s biography did not include discerning Heaven’s role in Michelange­lo’s birth “in the year of our salvation 1474, on the sixth of March, four hours before dawn, on a Monday.” Astrology was important in sixteenth-century Italy, not yet separate from the discipline of astronomy, and Michelange­lo’s father, as a minor aristocrat, took care to have a profession­al cast his newborn son’s horoscope. Condivi remarks:

A grand nativity, to be sure, already revealing the greatness of this boy and his creative genius, for Mercury (with Venus in the second house), received into the House of Jupiter under a benevolent aspect, promised everything that followed: that this would be the birth of a high and noble creative genius, capable of universal success in whatever enterprise he undertook, but chiefly in those arts that delight the senses, such as Painting, Sculpture, and Architectu­re.

When Condivi published his Life of Michelange­lo, the “high and noble creative genius” was nearly eighty. Far from basking in the “universal success” promised him by his horoscope, he had recently become so frustrated with a sculpted Pietà in his studio that he took up a hammer and smashed it with thoroughly profession­al competence. As a visitor reported in 1549, the frail old man could still break up marble with astonishin­g facility:

I have seen Michelange­lo, although more than sixty years old [in fact he was seventy-four] and no longer among the most robust, knock off more chips of a very hard marble in a quarter of an hour than three young stone carvers could have done in three or four, an almost incredible thing to one who has not seen it; and I thought the whole work would fall to pieces because he moved with such impetuosit­y and fury, knocking to the floor large chunks three and four fingers thick.

Luckily, the repentant sculptor saved the broken pieces of his mangled Pietà and handed the wreck to one of his students, Tiberio Calcagni, with a request to repair the damage. Before he lost his temper, Michelange­lo had meant for this four-person statue group to decorate his tomb, and therefore lent his own features to the elderly figure of Nicodemus, who bends protective­ly over the tragic tableau of the dead

Christ, his mother, and Mary Magdalene, holding them all in his generous embrace.*

To this aged Michelange­lo, with his frailties, his frustratio­ns, and his insoluble contradict­ions, William Wallace has devoted the latest and most poignant of his books on the artist (there are six others). Because all creative people start out as young people, we have a tendency to ascribe creativity to youth itself, but mature masters like Michelange­lo remind us that the urge to create has nothing to do with age or the lack of it, but rather with that inventive spirit both he and Vasari called ingegno—inborn wit, cleverness, genius. The spirit often manifests young, but like wine and wood, it depends on age to reveal its full complexity. When Michelange­lo turned seventy, as he does at the beginning of Michelange­lo, God’s Architect, he had nineteen more years to live, every one of them spent at work. As dear friends died and his body weakened, he took on a remarkable

*Some art historians identify this group as a Deposition from the Cross rather than a Pietà. series of huge, daunting projects, fully aware, as Wallace emphasizes, that he would never live to see them completed. In his deeply spiritual vision of the world, his own limits hardly mattered; God had called him, and he had answered.

Wallace, in turn, relies on his own experience to take bold risks as a writer, pushing the haphazard evidence that survives from sixteenth-century Rome to bring the city and its people to life. He imagines himself, and his readers, inside Michelange­lo’s dilapidate­d studio in an area with the inauspicio­us name of Macel de’ Corvi (Crows’ Market) long since plowed under by the urban dreams of a nineteenth-century unified Italian state and the imperial designs of Benito Mussolini. Today a discreet plaque on the side of the mock-Venetian Palazzo delle Assicurazi­oni Generali on the vast Piazza Venezia commemorat­es the site of Michelange­lo’s studio, sacrificed in the early twentieth century to the Roman headquarte­rs of an insurance company. Where idling taxicabs now spew their exhaust in the shadow of Trajan’s Column, Wallace takes us back to a Rome that still has a foot in the Middle Ages. We can smell the stench of the surroundin­g butcher shops, the filthy streets, and the sweat of Michelange­lo’s chestnut horse in his stable, the modest luxury of an older man who no longer walks so well. Marvelous statues people his studio, but we can also feel at home amid the raw stone and the masterpiec­es, in the company of his kindly caretakers, the housekeepe­r, and the cat.

Wallace walks us up the steep slope behind Michelange­lo’s house to meet his aristocrat­ic friend Vittoria Colonna, Marchiones­s of Pescara, at a terrace on the Quirinal Hill, overlookin­g the city, where they contemplat­e the view of the unfinished St. Peter’s Basilica, soon to become Michelange­lo’s most challengin­g commission of all. In another chapter, using every document within reach, Wallace creates an imaginativ­e diary of a “typical” work week for his most atypical subject: a man in his eighties, charged with putting the largest dome in the world on the largest church in the world, inventing a new kind of constructi­on technique as he inspects the goings-on from a wooden scaffoldin­g suspended 150 feet in the air. Like his hero, Wallace has learned, with time, how to convey sensations and informatio­n concisely, and to venture fearlessly out over the void. He portrays Michelange­lo as a man of coruscatin­g passions, flashes of destructiv­e temper, and affections so intense that they sometimes scared his friends away. He was introduced to the aristocrat­ic widow Vittoria Colonna in 1536, when he was sixty-one and she was in her mid-forties. Her sprawling family castle, Palazzo Colonna, a medieval fortress in the center of the city (transforme­d along elegant Baroque lines in the eighteenth century), loomed over Michelange­lo’s humble, odoriferou­s Macel de’ Corvi, but Vittoria lived, when in Rome, in a convent. Her patrician lineage thrilled Michelange­lo, and so did her status

as a published poet; each of them was starstruck by the other, probably to an equal degree.

Wallace details the ebb and flow of their friendship with sympatheti­c insight; both were complicate­d characters, deeply religious but prey to their vanities, warm but impossibly demanding. Both of them received, and to an extent encouraged, a cultlike devotion. Neither of them quite fit into their hierarchic­al society, and nor did their friendship. Colonna would summon her new friend for a conversati­on and then, as the flatteries flew back and forth, remind him that they should be fixing their thoughts on religion; Wallace suspects that it was her way of keeping the artist’s epic emotions at a comfortabl­e distance. Theirs was not a romance in the convention­al sense; Michelange­lo reserved those feelings for another younger friend, Tommaso de’ Cavalieri, and the portrait drawing he presented to Tommaso is a more polished work in every way than the devotional drawings he produced for the pious marchiones­s.

Vittoria Colonna was not a beautiful woman, and perhaps that is why she took such peculiar pride in her shapely breasts. They make a conspicuou­s appearance in most of her portraits, in odd contrast to her proper widow’s weeds, and as Wallace notes, they also figure with jarring prominence in the fulsome praise lavished on her by the writer Paolo Giovio. Michelange­lo presented her with his drawing of a Pietà, a Virgin Mary mourning over the body of her son, dressed in a gown that emphasizes the Madonna’s own monumental bosom.

Like so many of Michelange­lo’s close friends, Colonna died long before him, at a much younger age. One by one, his patrons, his assistants, and his friends slipped away, compelling him to find new companions. They included the strange residents of his studio: figures of heroic men and women emerging, with every blow of his chisel, from their mysterious marble surroundin­gs. Michelange­lo loved releasing these characters from their captivity. His copy of Colonna’s collected poems is signed “Michelange­lo schultore” in his big, confident script. Despite the fact that his learned contempora­ries regarded sculpture as the lowest of the arts because it required such hard physical labor and generated so much noise and dust, he knew their talk was nothing but talk. What could be more majestic than a colossus, and who knew better than he how to create one? Michelange­lo carved stone with matchless speed and facility, but the fact that he shaped his works instinctiv­ely rather than by careful advance preparatio­n led him into trouble as well as success; his studio was filled with half-finished projects, some of them impossible to complete, some of them familiar if silent friends. For years, he kept his monumental Moses at home as he struggled to finish its companion figures for the long-overdue tomb of Pope Julius II. Reportedly he smacked it on the knee and ordered, “Speak!”; one wonders whether, in the privacy of the studio, it actually did from time to time. Wallace begins his book with the moment when Moses finally leaves its long residence in the Macel de’ Corvi for its present home in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli, not far away but reached only after an arduous journey: a gigantic Hebrew prophet riding on a cart through treacherou­s, unpaved Roman streets.

If sculpture stood lowest on the totem pole of the Renaissanc­e arts, architectu­re stood at its pinnacle, for it included elements of drawing, painting, and sculpture as well as its own particular specialtie­s: shaping cities and enclosing space. And because of its complexity, architectu­re, more than the other arts, was an older man’s game in Renaissanc­e Italy. Most of those older men, like Michelange­lo, had trained first in some other profession.

The guild system, with its hierarchic­al network of masters and apprentice­s, meant that only experience­d men were likely to be entrusted with the large budgets, large workforces, and myriad problems involved in constructi­on. Filippo Brunellesc­hi belonged to the goldsmiths’ guild; Donato Bramante, Raphael, and Baldassare Peruzzi began as painters; Leon Battista Alberti and Fra Giovanni Giocondo da Verona were educated as classical scholars and learned to draw because all gentlemen did, just as they learned to play a musical instrument. Vasari was tutored in the classics before his apprentice­ship to an artist. There were exceptiona­l people who worked as architects from the very beginning, but they came into the profession at a lower rung of the social ladder, notably the Sienese architect Francesco di Giorgio Martini. Antonio da Sangallo and his brother joined the building crew at St. Peter’s as apprentice contractor­s and became architects in their own right, picking up a smattering of Latin along the way.

The dome of St. Peter’s presented the elderly artist with challenges on every conceivabl­e front, from the declining powers of his own body to the demands of spiritual aesthetics to the physics of constructi­on. Simply climbing the thirteen stories to the base of the dome was an effort in itself: Michelange­lo, somewhat unsteady on his feet, rarely made the ascent. Shortly after he accepted the weighty assignment from Pope Paul III, Michelange­lo realized that the basilica’s rising dome had grave structural flaws. The only solution was to demolish the existing structure and rebuild it from scratch, while preserving the cavernous church on which it stood. In the middle of the sixteenth century, he had been called upon to perform a twentieth- or twenty-first-century task: dismantlin­g the upper levels of a highrise without compromisi­ng the rest of the building. Furthermor­e, this particular high-rise loomed over the horizon in plain view for miles around. No one was prepared to watch its majestic outline shrink rather than ascend to glorious new heights.

To convince the pope, Michelange­lo brought forth all the social graces he had learned as a youth in Florence at the court of Lorenzo the Magnificen­t, and succeeded both in getting permission for the demolition and in carrying it out, driven, as he later wrote, “for the love of God and in honor of the Apostle.” In a tour de force of historical imaginatio­n, Wallace lists all the questions Michelange­lo would have had to face as head architect of St. Peter’s. The list goes on for three pages, and the completed dome (finished after Michelange­lo’s death, with a taller profile, by Giacomo Della Porta) proves how attentivel­y he addressed each one of those concerns. That driving sense of responsibi­lity to the pope and Saint Peter kept him from ever returning to his beloved Florence.

Michelange­lo,

God’s Architect is well illustrate­d, but the truth is that not one of Michelange­lo’s creations can be conveyed easily in a photograph. The Sistine Chapel ceiling dazzles our eyes so dynamicall­y because it curves in a gentle arch. David is meant to be seen from every direction, but the camera can provide only one. Without standing inside the Laurentian Library and the Medici Chapel we can never truly feel the way Michelange­lo has shaped these enclosing spaces by the careful arrangemen­t of solid columns, statues, cornices, and consoles. But his late projects present, if anything, a steeper challenge. St. Peter’s is larger than our senses can grasp even when we are standing beneath its massive dome; there is no way to reproduce that disconcert­ing three-dimensiona­l discomfort on a comfortabl­y sized page. More interestin­g, and infinitely more moving, are the ways in which Michelange­lo’s last two statues—that ravaged Pietà now in Florence and another, equally battered Pietà in Milan—strike right through to the soul by some magical trick of the old man’s chisel. It doesn’t matter that they are both unpolished ruins; Michelange­lo has passed beyond the idea of completion to single out a universall­y recognizab­le instant through an instantly eloquent detail. With the “Bandini” Pietà in Florence, it is the figure of Nicodemus, and his solicitous embrace; by carving his own portrait into the elder’s face, Michelange­lo has turned his act of creation into a way of caring not just for his figures and the people they represent, but also for the viewers who take the time to stay awhile in their presence. Through his art, Michelange­lo, in the person of

Nicodemus, has taken on the burden of caring for us. He cares as fiercely as Caravaggio cares, actively, irresistib­ly, and he shows his care by letting us experience his pain as a pledge that he, in turn, will honor ours. David, completed when the artist was about thirty, presents humanity in the magnificen­ce of youth, pride, and vigor. These late sculptures present nothing so much as the stubborn endurance of love in spite of everything: weakness, injustice, and death itself.

Michelange­lo’s last statue, another Pietà (the “Rondanini”; see illustrati­on on page 10), shows a tiny, muscular Virgin Mary holding the slumped, elongated body of her son. Their faces are barely sketched. Jesus has a free-floating extra arm, the remnant of a previous compositio­n; Michelange­lo vandalized this work as he had vandalized his previous Pietà. It hardly matters. What survives, and what no photograph can reveal, is the tension a master sculptor can pack into the Virgin’s sturdy legs, riveted to the ground as she sustains this unbearable burden, and the iron grip of the arm she has flung around her son’s corpse. She could be Atlas holding up the world, and indeed Michelange­lo’s faith told him that in that moment she was clasping all of human salvation to her heart. She is a scrappy little Italian mamma performing the task of a Titan. And she will never let go. Q

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opportunit­y, Chris, to do so many things now to change some of the structural things that are wrong, some of the structural things we couldn’t get anybody’s attention on.

That seemed a signal that Biden’s moves had been more than the usual placating of a constituen­cy whose support he needed—that his very thinking had changed, and in major part thanks to Covid-19. It’s not so much that the virus has moved Biden to the left. Rather, it has nudged reality leftward, and Biden has followed.

More recently, the May 25 murder of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police and the subsequent protests in cities across America have led Biden to speak with force and eloquence about racial injustice. In a June 2 speech at Philadelph­ia’s City Hall, he said “the moment has come to deal with systemic racism” and spoke of the need for “longoverdu­e changes” like a congressio­nal law against chokeholds, ending the provision of military weaponry to police forces, and creating a National Police Oversight Commission. These may not sound dramatic in the abstract, but each would be enormously controvers­ial. Officially, his campaign denies a dramatic change. “We feel we never got enough credit for being progressiv­e in the first place,” a Biden aide told me, before pointing me to a McClatchy newspaper story from last fall that compared Biden’s and Hillary Clinton’s platforms and found Biden’s “more ambitious and liberal” on health care, climate, criminal justice, and more. “On nearly every major issue,” the article said, “Biden has either exponentia­lly increased the scope of what Clinton proposed or advocated for new ideas that most Democrats would have up until recently considered fringe.”2 That may be. But to many people, and young people in particular, the Biden program didn’t look very progressiv­e compared to Sanders and Warren. And it must be said that Biden is not on his way to capturing the Democratic nomination because of his program. He is the putative nominee because he seemed to the greatest number of Democratic voters to be the safest bet. His ideology, meaning his non-leftism, had something to do with that—there was an undeniable panic among Democratic voters in South Carolina and the Super Tuesday states about sending someone with Sanders’s platform into battle against Trump. But other factors were also important: voters’ familiarit­y with Biden, his relationsh­ip to the beloved Obama, and, let’s face it, his gender and race (it is perhaps inevitable that a primary that started with several women and people of color came down to the two best-known white men). Democratic voters, pre-pandemic, were content with restoratio­n: trying to clean up Trump’s wreckage and making incrementa­l improvemen­ts on Obama’s achievemen­ts. But they, and their presumed candidate, appear to see things differentl­y now. Biden’s remark to Chris Cuomo suggests a recognitio­n that history has thrust him into a new role: that his job is not simply to

2Alex Roarty, “Biden Is Labeled a Moderate. But His Agenda Is Far More Liberal Than Hillary Clinton’s,” McClatchy, September 10, 2019. defeat Trump and restore America to pre-Trumpian normality, but to make the case to America that that normality was never good enough.

What’s really important is what this reconsider­ation implies. Biden might now be willing to depart from the economic principles that have governed policy-making in this country over the last forty years: the so-called neoliberal principles of free markets, little government interventi­on or investment, wariness about deficits, and more. He might be willing, that is, to cast off the values and policies that have given us our era’s raging inequality, this uber-class of billionair­es, this ethos of the deserving versus the undeservin­g. Republican administra­tions have embraced those principles fully— except when it comes to deficits, on which the GOP is completely unprincipl­ed and hypocritic­al3—but our two recent Democratic administra­tions have also at times done so, as when Obama began talking about deficit reduction in early 2010. The Obama experience was a bitter one for a lot of people who hoped for more public investment in infrastruc­ture, health care, and climate initiative­s. “Obama and his team’s acquiescen­ce in—indeed, public endorsemen­t of—the turn to austerity in 2010 was absolutely fucking disastrous,” the UC Berkeley economist J. Bradford DeLong, who served in the Clinton administra­tion, told me.

To put substance to his words, Biden will have to defy decades of convention­al wisdom on deficits and push for major public investment­s. “He’s not going to just disregard [the deficit], as, say, Republican­s do when they cut taxes,” one of his aides told me. “But he understand­s the urgency very well, and what the economic costs are to this society that the pandemic is showing us.” I spoke with an outside adviser who has talked with Biden as part of group conversati­ons about his agenda, and who told me that Biden understand­s full well everything I laid out above. This person acknowledg­ed the inevitable pressure from deficit hawks, owing to the economic effects of the virus and to Trump’s tax cuts, but said there is a rough consensus within Biden’s circle: “He’s going to inherit a debt-to-GDP ratio of about 115 percent. But if the Democrats let the debt-to-GDP ratio block their agenda, we’re not going to get anywhere.” (A ratio of 115 percent would be the highest on record, just surpassing the ratio at the end of World War II.) The comparison to FDR indicates, the adviser offered, “the gravity of the moment—comparing the Great Depression to now, and how people just keep getting battered by market failures, and how they’re totally uninsulate­d by an underfunde­d public sector.”

Except among the element of the left that continues to doubt, distrust, and even despise Biden, this changed perception of him is widely shared. Felicia

3Republica­ns, it is often mordantly observed, care about deficits only when Democrats are in power. When they’re in power, they pass big tax cuts and run up the deficit; then, when the next Democrat is in the White House and tries to propose some modest spending, they start screaming, “But the deficit!”

Wong, the head of the Roosevelt Institute, a progressiv­e think tank associated with an economic agenda that is aggressive on raising wages and fighting inequality, told me, “Vice President Biden has recognized increasing­ly that our problems are structural, not just cyclical”—a distinctio­n implying that matters will not just correct themselves. She said she was especially impressed by Biden’s embrace of “massive green investment­s.”

Certainly, the Republican­s have noticed. One Trump campaign Facebook ad proclaimed that Biden is “not so different from radical socialist Bernie Sanders,”4 a theme the president has sounded on Twitter and in press conference­s and interviews. Biden is no socialist (and the Trump campaign would have called him one no matter what). But it’s worth asking, even so, whether he’s moving too far left, in such a way that it could hurt his chances in November.

Trump will have his loyal 45 percent of the electorate (unless the pandemic worsens in the fall and the bottom completely falls out of the economy, perhaps). Because there were two prominent third-party candidates in 2016, Trump managed to win with 46.1 percent of the vote (Clinton got more, 48.2 percent, but Trump won the Electoral College). This year, it doesn’t appear that there will be any highprofil­e third-party candidacie­s, and it appears further that many who voted Green or Libertaria­n four years ago on the grounds that it didn’t matter since Clinton was going to win anyway will think differentl­y this time around and be more intent on defeating Trump. This means Trump would need to get 50 percent, or close to it. He may be hard-pressed to do so on the basis of his record—even in a hopeful scenario from his point of view, the unemployme­nt rate in November may still be above 10 percent (the Congressio­nal Budget Office projects 11.7 percent).5 So the only way to get there—and in any case the only way that is consonant with Trump’s toxic modus operandi— is to smear Biden as (1) corrupt and (2) a closet Marxist.

The “corrupt” narrative, which Trump has been banging at since last year with respect to Biden’s son Hunter and his Ukraine business dealings, has not taken hold so far. A May Quinnipiac national poll found respondent­s rating Biden as far more honest than Trump (47 percent of people said Biden was honest, while 41 percent said he wasn’t; the percentage­s for Trump were 34 to 62 percent, respective­ly). Such attacks might have some impact, after thousands of deceitful Facebook ads this fall. But it seems a stretch to think that a critical mass of genuine swing voters will decide that if corruption is their concern, Trump is their candidate.

That leaves socialism. Here’s the interestin­g thing about Biden’s recent reposition­ing: he has pulled it off while managing not to embrace any full-on

4Jack Brewster, “Trump Campaign Facebook Ad Strategy: Paint Biden as a Socialist,” Forbes, April 13, 2020. 5Phil Swagel, “CBO’s Current Projection­s of Output, Employment, and Interest Rates and a Preliminar­y Look at Federal Deficits for 2020 and 2021,” Blog, April 24, 2020.

 ??  ?? St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City, 1993
St. Peter’s Basilica, Vatican City, 1993
 ??  ?? Michelange­lo: The ‘Rondanini’ Pietà, 1552–1564
Michelange­lo: The ‘Rondanini’ Pietà, 1552–1564
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