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Moses (Michelangelo)

Moses (Italian: Mosè [moˈzɛ]; c. 1513–1515) is a sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance artist Michelangelo, housed in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome.[2] Commissioned in 1505 by Pope Julius II for his tomb, it depicts the biblical figure Moses with horns on his head, based on a description in chapter 34 of Exodus in the Vulgate, the Latin translation of the Bible used at that time.

Moses
ArtistMichelangelo
Yearc. 1513 (1513)–1515 (1515)[1]: 67 
MediumMarble sculpture
MovementRenaissance
SubjectBiblical Moses
Dimensions235 cm × 210 cm (92.5 in × 82.6 in)
LocationSan Pietro in Vincoli, Rome
Coordinates41°53′37.58″N 12°29′35.9″E / 41.8937722°N 12.493306°E / 41.8937722; 12.493306
Preceded byTomb of Pope Julius II
Followed byRebellious Slave

Commissioning and history edit

Pope Julius II commissioned Michelangelo to build his tomb in 1505 and it was finally completed in 1545; Julius II died in 1513.[3] The initial design by Michelangelo was massive and called for over 40 statues. The statue of Moses would have been placed on a tier about 3.74 meters high (12 ft 3 in), opposite a figure of St. Paul.[3]: 566  In the final design, the statue of Moses sits in the center of the bottom tier.

Description edit

Giorgio Vasari in the "Life of Michelangelo" wrote: "Michelangelo finished the Moses in marble, a statue of five braccia, unequaled by any modern or ancient work. Seated in a serious attitude, he rests with one arm on the tablets, and with the other holds his long glossy beard, the hairs, so difficult to render in sculpture, being so soft and downy that it seems as if the iron chisel must have become a brush. The beautiful face, like that of a saint and mighty prince, seems as one regards it to need the veil to cover it, so splendid and shining does it appear, and so well has the artist presented in the marble the divinity with which God had endowed that holy countenance. The draperies fall in graceful folds, the muscles of the arms and bones of the hands are of such beauty and perfection, as are the legs and knees, the feet were adorned with excellent shoes, that Moses may now be called the friend of God more than ever, since God has permitted his body to be prepared for the resurrection before the others by the hand of Michelangelo. The Jews still go every Saturday in troops to visit and adore it as a divine, not a human thing."[4]

The English translation of Sigmund Freud's "The Moses of Michelangelo" also provides a basic description of the sculpture: "The Moses of Michelangelo is represented as seated; his body faces forward, his head with its mighty beard looks to the left, his right foot rests on the ground, and his left leg is raised so that only the toes touch the ground. His right arm links the Tables of the Law with something that looks like a book in the right palm of his hand with a portion of his beard; his left arm lies in his lap."[5]

Jonathan Jones of the English newspaper, The Guardian, provides another description: "Moses's right hand protects the stone tablets bearing the Commandments; his left hand, veins throbbing, muscles tense, appears to be holding back from the violent action. When he came down from Mount Sinai, Moses found his people worshipping the Golden Calf – the false idol they had made. His anger defies the prison of stone, the limits of the sculptor's art. Few can resist the impression of a real mind, real emotions, in the figure that glares from his marble seat. Today, he glares at the tourists who mob the church of San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. He outfaces them, just as he outfaced Sigmund Freud, who spent three weeks in 1913 trying to figure out the sculpture's emotional effect. Moses's vitality has made this work popular since the 16th century; according to Vasari, Rome's Jewish population adopted the statue as their own. Its power must have something to do with the rendition of things that should be impossible to depict in stone; most quirkily, the beard – so ropy and smoky, its coils gave fantastic, snaking life. But where others might astonish us with technique, Michelangelo goes beyond this, leading us from formal to intellectual surprise, making us wonder why Moses fondles his beard, why Michelangelo has used this river of hair – in combination with the horns that were a conventional attribute of Moses – to give him an inhuman, demonic aspect."[6]

Interpretations edit

 
Michelangelo's Moses

In his 1914 essay entitled "The Moses of Michelangelo", Sigmund Freud associates the moment in the biblical narrative when Moses descends from the mountain the first time, carrying the tablets, and finds the Hebrew people worshipping the Golden Calf, as described in Exodus 32.[5] Freud describes Moses in a complex psychological state:

We may now, I believe, permit ourselves to reap the fruits of our endeavors. We have seen how many of those who have felt the influence of this statue has been compelled to interpret it as representing Moses agitated by the spectacle of his people fallen from grace and dancing round an idol. But this interpretation had to be given up, for it made us expect to see him spring up in the next moment, break the Tables and accomplish the work of vengeance. Such a conception, however, would fail to harmonize with the design of making this figure, together with three (or five) more seated figures, a part of the tomb of Julius II. We may now take up again the abandoned interpretation, for the Moses we have reconstructed will neither leap up nor cast the Tables from him. What we see before us is not the inception of violent action but the remains of a movement that has already taken place. In his first transport of fury, Moses desired to act, to spring up and take vengeance and forget the Tables; but he has overcome the temptation, and he will now remain seated and still, in his frozen wrath and his pain mingled with contempt. Nor will he throw away the Tables so that they will break on the stones, for it is on their particular account that he has controlled his anger; it was to preserve them that he kept his passion in check. In giving way to his rage and indignation, he had to neglect the Tables, and the hand which upheld them was withdrawn. They began to slide down and were in danger of being broken. This brought him to himself. He remembered his mission and for its sake renounced an indulgence of his feelings. His hand returned and saved the unsupported Tables before they had fallen to the ground. In this attitude, he remained immobilized, and in this attitude, Michelangelo has portrayed him as the guardian of the tomb. As our eyes travel down it, the figure exhibits three distinct emotional strata. The lines of the face reflect the feelings which have won the ascendancy; the middle of the figure shows the traces of suppressed movement, and the foot still retains the attitude of the projected action. It is as though the controlling influence had proceeded downwards from above. No mention has been made so far of the left arm, and it seems to claim a share in our interpretation. The hand is laid in the lap in a mild gesture and holds as though in a caress the end of the flowing beard. It seems as if it is meant to counteract the violence with which the other hand had misused the beard a few moments ago.[5]

 
Michelangelo's Moses, detail

Another view, put forward by Malcolm Macmillan and Peter J. Swales in their essay, "Observations from the Refuse-Heap: Freud, Michelangelo's Moses, and Psychoanalysis",[7] relates the sculpture to the second set of Tables and the events mentioned in Exodus 33 and 34. They note that Moses is holding blank tablets, which God had commanded Moses to make in preparation for the second giving of the Law; they also note that Moses is depicted with "horns" which the biblical texts describe Moses as having only after he returned to the Hebrew people after the second giving of the Law. They argue that the statue depicts the moment when Moses sees God, as described in Exodus 33: "The incident in question is the most significant part of the Old Testament story of the exodus. Moses, full of doubt about his own standing and that of his people, takes the considerable risk of requesting—even demanding—that they are forgiven, that he be granted the Lord's grace, and that the Lord resume his place and lead them to the Promised Land. Emboldened by his success, he then risks all by asking that the Lord reveal his glory. Little imagination is required to sense the intense emotion with which such a Moses would have awaited the Lord: Will he come? Will he renew the Covenant? Will he reveal his glory?"[7]: 78–79  They further argue that both Paul and Moses experienced God directly, an idea and pairing that were important to the Florentine Neo-Platonists, a group that the authors view both Michelangelo and Pope Julius II as being akin to. Finally, the authors state the key emotion on Moses' face is "awe at being face to face with the creator."[7]

Shining face interpreted as horns edit

 
Detail of the statue's bicorned head

Following the iconographic convention common in Latin Christianity, the statue has two horns on its head.[6][8][9][10][11]

The depiction of a horned Moses stems from the description of Moses' face as "cornuta" ("horned") in the Latin Vulgate translation of the passage found at Exodus chapter 34, specifically verses 29, 30 and 35, in which Moses returns to the people after receiving the commandments for the second time.[12] The Douay–Rheims Bible translates the Vulgate as, "And when Moses came down from the Mount Sinai, he held the two tables of the testimony, and he knew not that his face was horned from the conversation of the Lord."[13] This was Jerome's effort to faithfully translate the difficult, original Hebrew text, which uses the term קָרַן‎, qāran (based on the root, קֶרֶןqeren, which often means "horn"); the term is now interpreted to mean "shining" or "emitting rays" (somewhat like horns).[14][15] Although some historians believe that Jerome made an outright error,[16] Jerome himself appears to have seen qeren as a metaphor for "glorified", based on other commentaries he wrote, including one on Ezekiel, where he wrote that Moses' face had "become 'glorified', or as it says in the Hebrew, 'horned'."[8]: 77 [11]: 98–105  Another interpretation was that qeren also represented 'rings of light' as when Moses became enlightened after his journey. The Greek Septuagint, which Jerome also had available, translated the verse as "Moses knew not that the appearance of the skin of his face was glorified."[17] Medieval theologians and scholars believed that Jerome had intended to express a glorification of Moses' face, by his use of the Latin word for "horned."[8]: 74–90  The understanding that the original Hebrew was difficult and was not likely to mean "horns" persisted into and through the Renaissance.[18]

 
Illustration of Moses with horns from a 13th-century illuminated manuscript

Although Jerome completed the Vulgate in the late 4th century, the first known applications of the literal language of the Vulgate in art are found in an English illustrated book written in the vernacular from around 1050: the Aelfric Paraphrase of the Pentateuch and Joshua.[8]: 13–15  For the next 150 years or so, evidence for further images of a horned Moses is sparse.[8]: 61–65  Afterward, such images proliferated and can be found, for example, in the stained glass windows at Chartres Cathedral, the Sainte-Chapelle, and Notre Dame Cathedral, even as Moses continued to be depicted many times without horns.[8]: 65–74  In the 16th century, the prevalence of depictions of a horned Moses steeply diminished.[8]: 74 

In the Christian art of the Middle Ages depicting Moses with horns, this is sometimes done to depict him in glory, as a prophet and precursor of Jesus, but also in negative contexts, especially about Pauline contrasts between faith and law; the iconography was not clear-cut.[8]: 125–133 [11]: 9–10  Mellinkoff (1970) speculated that while the horns of Moses in origin were in no way associated with those of the Devil, the horns may nevertheless have developed a negative connotation with the development of anti-Jewish sentiment in the early modern period.[8]: 135–137 

A book published in 2008 advanced a theory that the "horns" on Michelangelo's statue were never meant to be seen and that it is wrong to interpret them as horns: "[The statue] never had horns. The artist had planned Moses as a masterpiece not only of sculpture but also of special optical effects worthy of any Hollywood movie. For this reason, the piece had to be elevated and facing straight forward, looking in the direction of the front door of the basilica. The two protrusions on the head would have been invisible to the viewer looking up from the floor below – the only thing that would have been seen was the light reflected off of them."[9] This interpretation has been contested.[19]

Casts and reproductions edit

 
A replica of the statue in Myers Park, Auckland, New Zealand

In 1931, Vojislav Veljković [sr], a former Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, known as "the father of the Yugoslav golden Dinar", and an avid art collector, petitioned Pope Pius XI to use the lost-wax method to have bronze casts of 21 of Michelangelo's original sculptures, including Moses, produced. The Pope's approval was granted on the condition that Veljković would fashion a suitable space with a climate control system that would ensure the internal temperature would be kept within one degree Celsius throughout the year, thus preventing deformation of the bronze over time. Veljković initiated the construction a modern exhibition pavilion in the courtyard of his family house in Belgrade, the capital of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, resulting in the first private museum in Southeast Europe. He named it Museo, though it would later become colloquially known as the Veljković Pavillion. The building also featured the first modern HVAC system installed in Southeast Europe.[20]

Once the Pope approved the petition, the Paris foundry Susse Frères was commissioned to produce the casts, and the certificates of authenticity were issued by the Vatican. Unfortunately, Veljković died before the new museum was opened in 1934, but his brother Jovan saw the project through.

Museo was opened to the public twice a week. In addition to the cast of Moses, the museum exhibited over 250 other art pieces, including casts of four other Michelangelo originals—Day, Night, Dying Slave, and Rebellious Slave—a number of paintings by Uroš Predić, Paja Jovanović, Sava Šumanović, Nadežda Petrović, and Marko Murat, a set of caricatures by Beta Vukanović, a cast of Jean-Antoine Houdon's Voltaire, as well as a number of antique sculptures.[21]

The Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in World War II led to the closure of Museo. During the occupation, the Germans did not plunder the collection.

After the war and the Communist takeover of Yugoslavia, the museum and the art pieces were nationalized by the state. The building was first given as an atelier to Moše Pijade, then to the sculptor Sreten Stojanović, and eventually converted to a shoe and leather storage by the Municipality of Savski Venac. All the paintings from the collection, as well as a few statues, went missing during this period. The bronze casts of Michelangelo's works were transferred to the Academy of Fine Arts, which later evolved into the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Arts in Belgrade. They were stored at Toma Rosandić's workshop in the Topčider neighborhood. The location would later become the seat of the sculpture department of the Faculty of Fine Arts. Today, the cast of Moses is still on display there.[22]

In 1971, a reproduction of the statue was unveiled at Myers Park in Auckland, New Zealand, purchased by the Milne & Choyce department store.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sweetser, Moses Foster (1878), Michel Angelo, Boston, Houghton, Osgood and Company
  2. ^ Colvin, Sidney (1911). "Michelangelo" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 366.
  3. ^ a b Panofsky, Erwin (1937). "The First Two Projects of Michelangelo's Tomb of Julius II". The Art Bulletin. 19 (4): 561–579. doi:10.2307/3045700. JSTOR 3045700.
  4. ^ Excerpt from Giorgio Vasari, Lives of the Artists, "Michelangelo Buonarotti of Florence, Painter, Sculptor and Architect (1475–1564)"
  5. ^ a b c Sigmund Freud. "The Moses of Michelangelo", The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud. Translated from the German under the general editorship of James Strachey in collaboration with Anna Freud, assisted by Alix Strachey and Alan Tyson. Volume XIII (1913–1914): Totem and Taboo and Other Works. London. Hogarth Press and Institute of Psycho-Analysis. 1st edition, 1955.
  6. ^ a b Jonathan Jones (June 7, 2002). "Moses, Michelangelo (1513–16)". The Guardian.
  7. ^ a b c Macmillan, Malcolm; Swales, Peter (2003), "Observations from the Refuse-Heap: Freud, Michelangelo's Moses, and Psychoanalysis", American Imago, Johns Hopkins University Press, 60 (1): 41–104, doi:10.1353/aim.2003.0003, ISSN 0065-860X, S2CID 170813918
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ruth Mellinkoff. The Horned Moses in Medieval Art and Thought (California Studies in the History of Art, 14). University of California Press; 1st ed. (June 1970) ISBN 0520017056
  9. ^ a b Blech, Benjamin & Doliner, Roy (2008). The Sistine Secrets, p. 238. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061469053
  10. ^ Leonard J. Hoenig, MD. (2011) "Shedding Light on Michelangelo's Moses", Archives of Dermatology. 147(9):1092
  11. ^ a b c Bena Elisha Medjuck Exodus 34:29–35: Moses' "Horns" in Early Bible Translations and Interpretations. Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, Department of Jewish Studies, McGill University. March 1998
  12. ^ (in Latin) Biblia Sacra Vulgata Exodus 34:29–35
  13. ^ Douay–Rheims Bible
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-01-29. Retrieved 2009-09-08.
  15. ^ (in Hebrew) Hebrew–English Bible (According to the Masoretic Text and the JPS 1917 Edition) Exodus 34:29
  16. ^ Diarmaid MacCulloch. Reformation: Europe's House Divided 1490–1700, London 2004, p. 82
  17. ^ English translation of the Greek Septuagint Bible. For Greek, see Εξοδος 34:29
  18. ^ Sir Thomas Browne (1646; 6th ed., 1672) Chap. IX. Of the Picture of Moses with Horns, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, V.ix (pp. 286–288)
  19. ^ Richard McBee. August 27, 2008. "Michelangelo and the Jews: Part II"
  20. ^ "Mikelanđelov mojsije sa senjaka Beograd ima skulpturu na kojoj bi mu pozavidele svetske metropole, a retko ko zna za nju". Blic.rs (in Serbian). 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  21. ^ "Hoće li Museo vratiti stari sjaj?". presscentar.uns.org.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  22. ^ "Kuća porodice Veljković | Zavod za zaštitu spomenika kulture grada Beograda" (in Serbian). 2020-12-30. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
  23. ^ "Statue of Moses". Sculpture Map. Retrieved 24 July 2023.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Michelangelo's Moses at Wikimedia Commons

This is art.

moses, michelangelo, moses, italian, mosè, moˈzɛ, 1513, 1515, sculpture, italian, high, renaissance, artist, michelangelo, housed, church, pietro, vincoli, rome, commissioned, 1505, pope, julius, tomb, depicts, biblical, figure, moses, with, horns, head, based. Moses Italian Mose moˈzɛ c 1513 1515 is a sculpture by the Italian High Renaissance artist Michelangelo housed in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli in Rome 2 Commissioned in 1505 by Pope Julius II for his tomb it depicts the biblical figure Moses with horns on his head based on a description in chapter 34 of Exodus in the Vulgate the Latin translation of the Bible used at that time MosesArtistMichelangeloYearc 1513 1513 1515 1515 1 67 MediumMarble sculptureMovementRenaissanceSubjectBiblical MosesDimensions235 cm 210 cm 92 5 in 82 6 in LocationSan Pietro in Vincoli RomeCoordinates41 53 37 58 N 12 29 35 9 E 41 8937722 N 12 493306 E 41 8937722 12 493306Preceded byTomb of Pope Julius IIFollowed byRebellious Slave Contents 1 Commissioning and history 2 Description 3 Interpretations 3 1 Shining face interpreted as horns 4 Casts and reproductions 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCommissioning and history editMain article Tomb of Pope Julius II Pope Julius II commissioned Michelangelo to build his tomb in 1505 and it was finally completed in 1545 Julius II died in 1513 3 The initial design by Michelangelo was massive and called for over 40 statues The statue of Moses would have been placed on a tier about 3 74 meters high 12 ft 3 in opposite a figure of St Paul 3 566 In the final design the statue of Moses sits in the center of the bottom tier Description editGiorgio Vasari in the Life of Michelangelo wrote Michelangelo finished the Moses in marble a statue of five braccia unequaled by any modern or ancient work Seated in a serious attitude he rests with one arm on the tablets and with the other holds his long glossy beard the hairs so difficult to render in sculpture being so soft and downy that it seems as if the iron chisel must have become a brush The beautiful face like that of a saint and mighty prince seems as one regards it to need the veil to cover it so splendid and shining does it appear and so well has the artist presented in the marble the divinity with which God had endowed that holy countenance The draperies fall in graceful folds the muscles of the arms and bones of the hands are of such beauty and perfection as are the legs and knees the feet were adorned with excellent shoes that Moses may now be called the friend of God more than ever since God has permitted his body to be prepared for the resurrection before the others by the hand of Michelangelo The Jews still go every Saturday in troops to visit and adore it as a divine not a human thing 4 The English translation of Sigmund Freud s The Moses of Michelangelo also provides a basic description of the sculpture The Moses of Michelangelo is represented as seated his body faces forward his head with its mighty beard looks to the left his right foot rests on the ground and his left leg is raised so that only the toes touch the ground His right arm links the Tables of the Law with something that looks like a book in the right palm of his hand with a portion of his beard his left arm lies in his lap 5 Jonathan Jones of the English newspaper The Guardian provides another description Moses s right hand protects the stone tablets bearing the Commandments his left hand veins throbbing muscles tense appears to be holding back from the violent action When he came down from Mount Sinai Moses found his people worshipping the Golden Calf the false idol they had made His anger defies the prison of stone the limits of the sculptor s art Few can resist the impression of a real mind real emotions in the figure that glares from his marble seat Today he glares at the tourists who mob the church of San Pietro in Vincoli Rome He outfaces them just as he outfaced Sigmund Freud who spent three weeks in 1913 trying to figure out the sculpture s emotional effect Moses s vitality has made this work popular since the 16th century according to Vasari Rome s Jewish population adopted the statue as their own Its power must have something to do with the rendition of things that should be impossible to depict in stone most quirkily the beard so ropy and smoky its coils gave fantastic snaking life But where others might astonish us with technique Michelangelo goes beyond this leading us from formal to intellectual surprise making us wonder why Moses fondles his beard why Michelangelo has used this river of hair in combination with the horns that were a conventional attribute of Moses to give him an inhuman demonic aspect 6 Interpretations edit nbsp Michelangelo s MosesIn his 1914 essay entitled The Moses of Michelangelo Sigmund Freud associates the moment in the biblical narrative when Moses descends from the mountain the first time carrying the tablets and finds the Hebrew people worshipping the Golden Calf as described in Exodus 32 5 Freud describes Moses in a complex psychological state We may now I believe permit ourselves to reap the fruits of our endeavors We have seen how many of those who have felt the influence of this statue has been compelled to interpret it as representing Moses agitated by the spectacle of his people fallen from grace and dancing round an idol But this interpretation had to be given up for it made us expect to see him spring up in the next moment break the Tables and accomplish the work of vengeance Such a conception however would fail to harmonize with the design of making this figure together with three or five more seated figures a part of the tomb of Julius II We may now take up again the abandoned interpretation for the Moses we have reconstructed will neither leap up nor cast the Tables from him What we see before us is not the inception of violent action but the remains of a movement that has already taken place In his first transport of fury Moses desired to act to spring up and take vengeance and forget the Tables but he has overcome the temptation and he will now remain seated and still in his frozen wrath and his pain mingled with contempt Nor will he throw away the Tables so that they will break on the stones for it is on their particular account that he has controlled his anger it was to preserve them that he kept his passion in check In giving way to his rage and indignation he had to neglect the Tables and the hand which upheld them was withdrawn They began to slide down and were in danger of being broken This brought him to himself He remembered his mission and for its sake renounced an indulgence of his feelings His hand returned and saved the unsupported Tables before they had fallen to the ground In this attitude he remained immobilized and in this attitude Michelangelo has portrayed him as the guardian of the tomb As our eyes travel down it the figure exhibits three distinct emotional strata The lines of the face reflect the feelings which have won the ascendancy the middle of the figure shows the traces of suppressed movement and the foot still retains the attitude of the projected action It is as though the controlling influence had proceeded downwards from above No mention has been made so far of the left arm and it seems to claim a share in our interpretation The hand is laid in the lap in a mild gesture and holds as though in a caress the end of the flowing beard It seems as if it is meant to counteract the violence with which the other hand had misused the beard a few moments ago 5 nbsp Michelangelo s Moses detailAnother view put forward by Malcolm Macmillan and Peter J Swales in their essay Observations from the Refuse Heap Freud Michelangelo s Moses and Psychoanalysis 7 relates the sculpture to the second set of Tables and the events mentioned in Exodus 33 and 34 They note that Moses is holding blank tablets which God had commanded Moses to make in preparation for the second giving of the Law they also note that Moses is depicted with horns which the biblical texts describe Moses as having only after he returned to the Hebrew people after the second giving of the Law They argue that the statue depicts the moment when Moses sees God as described in Exodus 33 The incident in question is the most significant part of the Old Testament story of the exodus Moses full of doubt about his own standing and that of his people takes the considerable risk of requesting even demanding that they are forgiven that he be granted the Lord s grace and that the Lord resume his place and lead them to the Promised Land Emboldened by his success he then risks all by asking that the Lord reveal his glory Little imagination is required to sense the intense emotion with which such a Moses would have awaited the Lord Will he come Will he renew the Covenant Will he reveal his glory 7 78 79 They further argue that both Paul and Moses experienced God directly an idea and pairing that were important to the Florentine Neo Platonists a group that the authors view both Michelangelo and Pope Julius II as being akin to Finally the authors state the key emotion on Moses face is awe at being face to face with the creator 7 Shining face interpreted as horns edit nbsp Detail of the statue s bicorned headFollowing the iconographic convention common in Latin Christianity the statue has two horns on its head 6 8 9 10 11 The depiction of a horned Moses stems from the description of Moses face as cornuta horned in the Latin Vulgate translation of the passage found at Exodus chapter 34 specifically verses 29 30 and 35 in which Moses returns to the people after receiving the commandments for the second time 12 The Douay Rheims Bible translates the Vulgate as And when Moses came down from the Mount Sinai he held the two tables of the testimony and he knew not that his face was horned from the conversation of the Lord 13 This was Jerome s effort to faithfully translate the difficult original Hebrew text which uses the term ק ר ן qaran based on the root ק ר ן qeren which often means horn the term is now interpreted to mean shining or emitting rays somewhat like horns 14 15 Although some historians believe that Jerome made an outright error 16 Jerome himself appears to have seen qeren as a metaphor for glorified based on other commentaries he wrote including one on Ezekiel where he wrote that Moses face had become glorified or as it says in the Hebrew horned 8 77 11 98 105 Another interpretation was that qeren also represented rings of light as when Moses became enlightened after his journey The Greek Septuagint which Jerome also had available translated the verse as Moses knew not that the appearance of the skin of his face was glorified 17 Medieval theologians and scholars believed that Jerome had intended to express a glorification of Moses face by his use of the Latin word for horned 8 74 90 The understanding that the original Hebrew was difficult and was not likely to mean horns persisted into and through the Renaissance 18 nbsp Illustration of Moses with horns from a 13th century illuminated manuscriptAlthough Jerome completed the Vulgate in the late 4th century the first known applications of the literal language of the Vulgate in art are found in an English illustrated book written in the vernacular from around 1050 the Aelfric Paraphrase of the Pentateuch and Joshua 8 13 15 For the next 150 years or so evidence for further images of a horned Moses is sparse 8 61 65 Afterward such images proliferated and can be found for example in the stained glass windows at Chartres Cathedral the Sainte Chapelle and Notre Dame Cathedral even as Moses continued to be depicted many times without horns 8 65 74 In the 16th century the prevalence of depictions of a horned Moses steeply diminished 8 74 In the Christian art of the Middle Ages depicting Moses with horns this is sometimes done to depict him in glory as a prophet and precursor of Jesus but also in negative contexts especially about Pauline contrasts between faith and law the iconography was not clear cut 8 125 133 11 9 10 Mellinkoff 1970 speculated that while the horns of Moses in origin were in no way associated with those of the Devil the horns may nevertheless have developed a negative connotation with the development of anti Jewish sentiment in the early modern period 8 135 137 A book published in 2008 advanced a theory that the horns on Michelangelo s statue were never meant to be seen and that it is wrong to interpret them as horns The statue never had horns The artist had planned Moses as a masterpiece not only of sculpture but also of special optical effects worthy of any Hollywood movie For this reason the piece had to be elevated and facing straight forward looking in the direction of the front door of the basilica The two protrusions on the head would have been invisible to the viewer looking up from the floor below the only thing that would have been seen was the light reflected off of them 9 This interpretation has been contested 19 Casts and reproductions edit nbsp A replica of the statue in Myers Park Auckland New ZealandIn 1931 Vojislav Veljkovic sr a former Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia known as the father of the Yugoslav golden Dinar and an avid art collector petitioned Pope Pius XI to use the lost wax method to have bronze casts of 21 of Michelangelo s original sculptures including Moses produced The Pope s approval was granted on the condition that Veljkovic would fashion a suitable space with a climate control system that would ensure the internal temperature would be kept within one degree Celsius throughout the year thus preventing deformation of the bronze over time Veljkovic initiated the construction a modern exhibition pavilion in the courtyard of his family house in Belgrade the capital of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia resulting in the first private museum in Southeast Europe He named it Museo though it would later become colloquially known as the Veljkovic Pavillion The building also featured the first modern HVAC system installed in Southeast Europe 20 Once the Pope approved the petition the Paris foundry Susse Freres was commissioned to produce the casts and the certificates of authenticity were issued by the Vatican Unfortunately Veljkovic died before the new museum was opened in 1934 but his brother Jovan saw the project through Museo was opened to the public twice a week In addition to the cast of Moses the museum exhibited over 250 other art pieces including casts of four other Michelangelo originals Day Night Dying Slave and Rebellious Slave a number of paintings by Uros Predic Paja Jovanovic Sava Sumanovic Nadezda Petrovic and Marko Murat a set of caricatures by Beta Vukanovic a cast of Jean Antoine Houdon s Voltaire as well as a number of antique sculptures 21 The Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in World War II led to the closure of Museo During the occupation the Germans did not plunder the collection After the war and the Communist takeover of Yugoslavia the museum and the art pieces were nationalized by the state The building was first given as an atelier to Mose Pijade then to the sculptor Sreten Stojanovic and eventually converted to a shoe and leather storage by the Municipality of Savski Venac All the paintings from the collection as well as a few statues went missing during this period The bronze casts of Michelangelo s works were transferred to the Academy of Fine Arts which later evolved into the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Arts in Belgrade They were stored at Toma Rosandic s workshop in the Topcider neighborhood The location would later become the seat of the sculpture department of the Faculty of Fine Arts Today the cast of Moses is still on display there 22 In 1971 a reproduction of the statue was unveiled at Myers Park in Auckland New Zealand purchased by the Milne amp Choyce department store 23 See also edit nbsp Visual arts portalList of works by Michelangelo Art patronage of Julius IIReferences edit Sweetser Moses Foster 1878 Michel Angelo Boston Houghton Osgood and Company Colvin Sidney 1911 Michelangelo In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 18 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 366 a b Panofsky Erwin 1937 The First Two Projects of Michelangelo s Tomb of Julius II The Art Bulletin 19 4 561 579 doi 10 2307 3045700 JSTOR 3045700 Excerpt from Giorgio Vasari Lives of the Artists Michelangelo Buonarotti of Florence Painter Sculptor and Architect 1475 1564 a b c Sigmund Freud The Moses of Michelangelo The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud Translated from the German under the general editorship of James Strachey in collaboration with Anna Freud assisted by Alix Strachey and Alan Tyson Volume XIII 1913 1914 Totem and Taboo and Other Works London Hogarth Press and Institute of Psycho Analysis 1st edition 1955 a b Jonathan Jones June 7 2002 Moses Michelangelo 1513 16 The Guardian a b c Macmillan Malcolm Swales Peter 2003 Observations from the Refuse Heap Freud Michelangelo s Moses and Psychoanalysis American Imago Johns Hopkins University Press 60 1 41 104 doi 10 1353 aim 2003 0003 ISSN 0065 860X S2CID 170813918 a b c d e f g h i Ruth Mellinkoff The Horned Moses in Medieval Art and Thought California Studies in the History of Art 14 University of California Press 1st ed June 1970 ISBN 0520017056 a b Blech Benjamin amp Doliner Roy 2008 The Sistine Secrets p 238 HarperCollins ISBN 9780061469053 Leonard J Hoenig MD 2011 Shedding Light on Michelangelo s Moses Archives of Dermatology 147 9 1092 a b c Bena Elisha Medjuck Exodus 34 29 35 Moses Horns in Early Bible Translations and Interpretations Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Department of Jewish Studies McGill University March 1998 in Latin Biblia Sacra Vulgata Exodus 34 29 35 Douay Rheims Bible Horny Jew What s the deal with Michelangelo s Moses Archived from the original on 2010 01 29 Retrieved 2009 09 08 in Hebrew Hebrew English Bible According to the Masoretic Text and the JPS 1917 Edition Exodus 34 29 Diarmaid MacCulloch Reformation Europe s House Divided 1490 1700 London 2004 p 82 English translation of the Greek Septuagint Bible For Greek see E3odos 34 29 Sir Thomas Browne 1646 6th ed 1672 Chap IX Of the Picture of Moses with Horns Pseudodoxia Epidemica V ix pp 286 288 Richard McBee August 27 2008 Michelangelo and the Jews Part II Mikelanđelov mojsije sa senjaka Beograd ima skulpturu na kojoj bi mu pozavidele svetske metropole a retko ko zna za nju Blic rs in Serbian 2019 02 07 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Hoce li Museo vratiti stari sjaj presscentar uns org rs in Serbian Retrieved 2023 06 20 Kuca porodice Veljkovic Zavod za zastitu spomenika kulture grada Beograda in Serbian 2020 12 30 Retrieved 2023 06 20 Statue of Moses Sculpture Map Retrieved 24 July 2023 Further reading editBertman Stephen The Antisemitic Origin of Michelangelo s Horned Moses Shofar An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies 27 4 Summer 2009 95 106 External links edit nbsp Media related to Michelangelo s Moses at Wikimedia Commons Portal nbsp Visual arts This is art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Moses Michelangelo amp oldid 1205064938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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