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Michelangelo's Last Judgement

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The artist that I chose to present his artwork is Michelangelo. One of Michelangelo’s most famous piece is The Last Judgement. The Last Judgement was ordered by Pope Clement VII in 1534 and was started in 1536. Michelangelo took five years to create The Last Judgement and it was one of the largest fresco painting in the 16th century. The painting created by Michelangelo is currently located in the Sistine Chapel of Rome. He used a painting technique called “fresco”. Fresco is the use of watercolor on wet plaster. The painting represents the second coming of Christ and the Judgement of God for all of humanity. In the center of the painting, Christ and with him, his mother, the Virgin Mary. The center represents the waiting of the Last Judgement …show more content…

David is a marble statue seen as a nude male and is 17 feet tall. The sculpture is in Florence Italy in Galleria dell ’Accademia. This sculpture took Michelangelo three years to complete and was finished in 1504. David is the first nude standing sculpture in a thousand years and is a symbol of Florence. Michelangelo is thought to believe that he borrowed the idea from the Greek and the Hellenistic Era to build a nude sculpture. David represents victory and a hero. As seen in the sculpture, Michelangelo uses the technique of contrapposto that was used in Greek art and Hellenistic art. David is putting more weight on one foot than another and that creates the twist off with his hips and legs. The slingshot that David is holding represents a weapon that he used to defeat Goliath. The whole story that comes with the sculpture is Goliath was seemed as impossible to defeat but David comes around and defeats Goliath with a slingshot and beheads him. The lines and the detail that Michelangelo put in represents the use of geometry/math. Rather than being relaxed, David’s face is tight and looks like he is ready for battle. His eyes are looking at someone or something far away and ready for something to happen. Many people compare Donatello's David to Michelangelo’s David because they appear different but were based on the same story. In Donatello’s David, he is seen standing on top of Goliath’s head and instead of having a

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