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Sistine Chapel

The Sistine Chapel (/ˌsɪsˈtn ˈæpəl/; Latin: Sacellum Sixtinum; Italian: Cappella Sistina [kapˈpɛlla siˈstiːna]) is a chapel in the Apostolic Palace, the pope's official residence in Vatican City. Originally known as the Cappella Magna ('Great Chapel'), the chapel takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV, who had it built between 1473 and 1481. Since that time, the chapel has served as a place of both religious and functionary papal activity. Today, it is the site of the papal conclave, the process by which a new pope is selected. The fame of the Sistine Chapel lies mainly in the frescoes that decorate the interior, most particularly the Sistine Chapel ceiling and The Last Judgment, both by Michelangelo.

  • Sistine Chapel
  • Sacellum Sixtinum (Latin)
  • Cappella Sistina (Italian)
East side of the Chapel, from the altar end
Religion
AffiliationRoman Catholic
DistrictDiocese of Rome
Ecclesiastical or organizational statusPapal oratory
LeadershipFrancis
Year consecrated15 August 1483
Location
LocationVatican City
Location on a map of Vatican City
Geographic coordinates41°54′11″N 12°27′16″E / 41.90306°N 12.45444°E / 41.90306; 12.45444
Architecture
Architect(s)Baccio Pontelli, Giovanni de Dolci[1]
TypeChurch
Groundbreaking1505[1]
Completed1508[1]
Specifications
Length40.9 metres (134 ft)
Width (nave)13.4 metres (44 ft)
Height (max)20.7 metres (68 ft)
Official name: Vatican City
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iv, vi
Designated1984[2]
Reference no.286
State Party Holy See
RegionEurope and North America
Website
mv.vatican.va

During the reign of Sixtus IV, a team of Renaissance painters that included Sandro Botticelli, Pietro Perugino, Pinturicchio, Domenico Ghirlandaio and Cosimo Rosselli, created a series of frescos depicting the Life of Moses and the Life of Christ, offset by papal portraits above and trompe-l'œil drapery below. These paintings were completed in 1482, and on 15 August 1483 Sixtus IV celebrated the first mass in the Sistine Chapel for the Feast of the Assumption, at which ceremony the chapel was consecrated and dedicated to the Virgin Mary.[3][4]

Between 1508 and 1512, under the patronage of Pope Julius II, Michelangelo painted the chapel's ceiling, a project that changed the course of Western art and is regarded as one of the major artistic accomplishments of human civilization.[5][6] In a different political climate, after the Sack of Rome, he returned and, between 1535 and 1541, painted The Last Judgment for Popes Clement VII and Paul III.[7] The fame of Michelangelo's paintings has drawn multitudes of visitors to the chapel ever since they were revealed five hundred years ago. According to recent studies, the Sistine Chapel is influenced by the thought of Joachim of Fiore. The monk and philosopher thus influenced the vision and the iconographic project for the representation of the Last Judgment. Michelangelo's frescoes with an eschatological theme are therefore an artistic development of the various Joachim writings of the 12th century about the apocalypse and the last days.[8]

History edit

While known as the location of papal conclaves, the primary function of the Sistine Chapel is as the chapel of the Papal Chapel (Cappella Pontificia), one of the two bodies of the papal household, called until 1968 the Papal Court (Pontificalis Aula). At the time of Pope Sixtus IV in the late 15th century, the Papal Chapel comprised about 200 people, including clerics, officials of the Vatican and distinguished laity. There were 50 occasions during the year on which it was prescribed by the Papal Calendar that the whole Papal Chapel should meet.[9] Of these 50 occasions, 35 were masses, of which 8 were held in basilicas, in general St. Peter's, and were attended by large congregations. These included the Christmas Day and Easter masses, at which the Pope himself was the celebrant. The other 27 masses could be held in a smaller, less public space, for which the Cappella Maggiore was used before it was rebuilt on the same site as the Sistine Chapel.

The Cappella Maggiore derived its name, the Greater Chapel, from the fact that there was another chapel also in use by the Pope and his retinue for daily worship. At the time of Pope Sixtus IV, this was the Chapel of Pope Nicholas V, which had been decorated by Fra Angelico. The Cappella Maggiore is recorded as existing in 1368. According to a communication from Andreas of Trebizond to Pope Sixtus IV, by the time of its demolition to make way for the present chapel, the Cappella Maggiore was in a ruinous state with its walls leaning.[10]

 
The Sistine Chapel as it may have appeared in the 15th century (19th-century drawing)

The present chapel, on the site of the Cappella Maggiore, was designed by Baccio Pontelli for Pope Sixtus IV, for whom it is named, and built under the supervision of Giovannino de Dolci between 1473 and 1481.[1] The proportions of the present chapel appear to closely follow those of the original. After its completion, the chapel was decorated with frescoes by a number of the most famous artists of the High Renaissance, including Sandro Botticelli, Domenico Ghirlandaio, Pietro Perugino, and Michelangelo.[10]

The first mass in the Sistine Chapel was celebrated on 15 August 1483, the Feast of the Assumption, at which ceremony the chapel was consecrated and dedicated to the Virgin Mary.[11]

The Sistine Chapel has maintained its function to the present day and continues to host the important services of the Papal Calendar, unless the Pope is travelling. There is a permanent choir, the Sistine Chapel Choir, for whom much original music has been written, the most famous piece being Gregorio Allegri's Miserere.[12]

Papal conclave edit

One of the functions of the Sistine Chapel is as a venue for the election of each successive pope in a conclave of the College of Cardinals. On the occasion of a conclave, a chimney is installed in the roof of the chapel, from which smoke arises as a signal. If white smoke, which is created by burning the ballots of the election, appears, a new Pope has been elected. If no candidate receives the required two-thirds vote, the cardinals send up black smoke—created by burning the ballots along with wet straw and chemical additives—it means that no successful election has yet occurred.[13]

The first papal conclave to be held on the Sistine Chapel was the conclave of 1492, which took place from 6 to 11 August of the same year and in which Pope Alexander VI, also known as Rodrigo Borja, was elected.

The conclave also provided for the cardinals a space in which they could hear mass, and in which they could eat, sleep, and pass time attended by servants. From 1455, conclaves have been held in the Vatican Palace; until the Great Schism, they were held in the Dominican convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva.[14] Since 1996, John Paul II's Apostolic Constitution Universi Dominici gregis requires the cardinals to be lodged in the Domus Sanctae Marthae during a papal conclave, but to continue to vote in the Sistine Chapel.[15]

Canopies for each cardinal-elector were once used during conclaves—a sign of equal dignity. After the new Pope accepts his election, he would give his new name; at this time, the other Cardinals would tug on a rope attached to their seats to lower their canopies. Until reforms instituted by Saint Pius X, the canopies were of different colours to designate which Cardinals had been appointed by which Pope. Paul VI abolished the canopies altogether, since, under his papacy, the population of the College of Cardinals had increased so much to the point that they would need to be seated in rows of two against the walls, making the canopies obstruct the view of the cardinals in the back row. In the wake of a conclave taking place to preserve the integrity of the marble floor on the Sistine Chapel, carpenters install a slightly elevated wooden floor alongside a wooden ramp in the entrance for those Cardinals who for one reason or another need to be transported in a wheelchair.

Architecture edit

Structure edit

 
Exterior of the Sistine Chapel

The chapel is about 35 metres (118 feet) long and 14 m (46 ft) wide,[16] with the ceiling rising to about 20 m (66 ft) above the main floor.[10]: 28 [17]

Its exterior is unadorned by architectural or decorative details, as is common in many Italian churches of the Medieval and Renaissance eras. It has no exterior façade or exterior processional doorways, as the ingress has always been from internal rooms within the Apostolic Palace (Papal Palace), and the exterior can be seen only from nearby windows and light-wells in the palace. Subsidence and cracking of masonry also have affected the Cappella Maggiore, necessitating the building of very large buttresses to brace the exterior walls. The accretion of other buildings has further altered the exterior appearance of the chapel.

The building is divided into three stories of which the lowest is a very tall basement level with several utilitarian windows and a doorway giving onto the exterior court. Internally, the basement is robustly vaulted to support the chapel. The building had six tall arched windows down each side and two at either end, several of which have been blocked. Above the vault is a third story with wardrooms for guards. At this level, an open projecting gangway was constructed, which encircled the building supported on an arcade springing from the walls. The gangway has been roofed as it was a continual source of water leaking into the vault of the chapel.

Interior of the Sistine Chapel edit

The general proportions of the chapel use the length as the unit of measurement. This has been divided by three to get the width and by two to get the height. Maintaining the ratio, there were six windows down each side and two at either end. Defined proportions were a feature of Renaissance architecture and reflected the growing interest in the Classical heritage of Rome.

 
A reconstruction of the appearance of the west Wall chapel in the 1480s, prior to the painting of the ceiling
 
Drawing by Pinturicchio of Perugino's lost Assumption in the Sistine Chapel
 
Raphael tapestries in the Sistine Chapel

The ceiling of the chapel is a flattened barrel vault springing from a course that encircles the walls at the level of the springing of the window arches. This barrel vault is cut transversely by smaller vaults over each window, which divide the barrel vault at its lowest level into a series of large pendentives rising from shallow pilasters between each window. The barrel vault was originally painted brilliant-blue and dotted with gold stars, to the design of Piermatteo Lauro de' Manfredi da Amelia.[10] The pavement is in opus alexandrinum, a decorative style using marble and coloured stone in a pattern that reflects the earlier proportion in the division of the interior and also marks the processional way from the main door, used by the Pope on important occasions such as Palm Sunday.

A screen or transenna in marble by Mino da Fiesole, Andrea Bregno, and Giovanni Dalmata divides the chapel into two parts.[18] Originally these made equal space for the members of the Papal Chapel within the sanctuary near the altar and the pilgrims and townsfolk without. However, with growth in the number of those attending the Pope, the screen was moved giving a reduced area for the faithful laity. The transenna is surmounted by a row of ornate candlesticks, once gilt, and has a wooden door, where once there was an ornate door of gilded wrought iron. The sculptors of the transenna also provided the cantoria or projecting choir gallery.

Decoration edit

 
Diagram of part of the vertical fresco decoration of the Sistine Chapel

History edit

The first stage in the decoration of the Sistine Chapel was the painting of the ceiling in blue, studded with gilt stars,[10] and with decorative borders around the architectural details of the pendentives. This was entirely replaced when Michelangelo came to work on the ceiling in 1508.

Of the present scheme of frescos, the earliest part is that of the side walls. They are divided into three main tiers. The central tier of the walls has two cycles of paintings, which complement each other, The Life of Moses and The Life of Christ. They were commissioned in 1480 by Pope Sixtus IV and executed by Domenico Ghirlandaio, Sandro Botticelli, Pietro Perugino, Cosimo Rosselli and their workshops. They originally ran all round the walls, but have since been replaced on both end walls.

The project was perhaps supervised by Perugino, who arrived at the chapel prior to the Florentines. It is probable that the commission of Ghirlandaio, Botticelli and Roselli was part of a reconciliation project between Lorenzo de' Medici, the de facto ruler of Florence, and Pope Sixtus IV. The Florentines started to work in the Sistine Chapel in the spring of 1481.

Beneath the cycles of The Life of Moses and The Life of Christ, the lower level of the walls is decorated with frescoed hangings in silver and gold. Above the narrative frescos, the upper tier is divided into two zones. At the lower level of the windows is a Gallery of Popes painted at the same time as the Lives. Around the arched tops of the windows are areas known as the lunettes which contain the Ancestors of Christ, painted by Michelangelo as part of the scheme for the ceiling.

The ceiling was commissioned by Pope Julius II and painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512. The commission was originally to paint the twelve apostles on the triangular pendentives which support the vault; however, Michelangelo demanded a free hand in the pictorial content of the scheme. He painted a series of nine pictures showing God's Creation of the World, God's Relationship with Mankind, and Mankind's Fall from God's Grace. On the large pendentives he painted twelve Biblical and Classical men and women who prophesied that God would send Jesus Christ for the salvation of mankind, and around the upper parts of the windows, the Ancestors of Christ.

In 1515, Raphael was commissioned by Pope Leo X to design a series of ten tapestries to hang around the lower tier of the walls.[19] The tapestries depict events from the Life of St. Peter [four tapestries] the Life of St. Paul [six tapestries], the founders of the Christian Church in Rome as described in the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles. Work began in mid-1515. Due to their large size, manufacture of the hangings was carried out in Brussels, and took four years under the hands of the weavers in the shop of Pieter van Aelst.[20] Raphael's tapestries were looted during the Sack of Rome in 1527 and were either burnt for their precious metal content or were scattered around Europe. In the late 20th century, a set was reassembled from several further sets that had been made after the first set, and displayed again in the Sistine Chapel in 1983. The tapestries continue to be used at occasional ceremonies of particular importance. The full-size preparatory cartoons for seven of the 10 tapestries are known as the Raphael Cartoons and are in London.[21]

At this point, the decorative scheme displayed a consistent iconographical pattern. The tier of Popes, which, in the scheme intended by Pope Julius, would have appeared immediately below the Twelve Apostles, would have emphasised the apostolic succession. It has been argued that the present scheme shows the two Biblical Testaments merged in order to reveal the Old predicting and framing the New, synthesizing the logic of the Christian Bible.[22]

This was disrupted by a further commission to Michelangelo to decorate the wall above the altar with The Last Judgment, 1537–1541. The painting of this scene necessitated the obliteration of two episodes from the Lives—the Nativity of Jesus and the Finding of Moses; several of the Popes; and two sets of Ancestors.

Frescoes edit

 
Trials of Moses by Botticelli

Southern wall edit

The southern wall is decorated with the Stories of Moses, painted in 1481–1482. Starting from the altar, they include:

Northern wall edit

 
The Delivery of the Keys by Perugino

The northern wall houses the Stories of Jesus, dating to 1481–1482. They include:

Eastern wall edit

 
Resurrection of Christ

Michelangelo's frescoes edit

 
The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo

Michelangelo was commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1508 to repaint the vault, or ceiling, of the chapel.[23] The work was completed between 1508 and late 1512.[24] He painted the Last Judgment over the altar, between 1535 and 1541, on commission from Pope Paul III Farnese.[25]

Michelangelo was intimidated by the scale of the commission, and made it known from the outset of Julius II's approach that he would prefer to decline. He felt he was more of a sculptor than a painter, and was suspicious that such a large-scale project was being offered to him by enemies as a set-up for an inevitable fall. For Michelangelo, the project was a distraction from the major marble sculpture that had preoccupied him for the previous few years.[26] The sources of Michelangelo's inspiration are not easily determined; both Joachite and Augustinian theologians were within the sphere of Julius' influence.[27]

Ceiling edit

 
A section of the Sistine Chapel ceiling

To be able to reach the ceiling, Michelangelo needed a support; the first idea was by Julius' favoured architect Donato Bramante, who wanted to build for him a scaffold to be suspended in the air with ropes. However, Bramante did not successfully complete the task, and the structure he built was flawed. He had perforated the vault in order to lower strings to secure the scaffold. Michelangelo laughed when he saw the structure, and believed it would leave holes in the ceiling once the work was ended. He asked Bramante what was to happen when the painter reached the perforations, but the architect had no answer.

The matter was taken before the Pope, who ordered Michelangelo to build a scaffold of his own. Michelangelo created a flat wooden platform on brackets built out from holes in the wall, high up near the top of the windows. Contrary to popular belief, he did not lie on this scaffolding while he painted, but painted from a standing position.[28]

Michelangelo used bright colours, easily visible from the floor. On the lowest part of the ceiling he painted the ancestors of Christ. Above this he alternated male and female prophets, with Jonah over the altar. On the highest section, Michelangelo painted nine stories from the Book of Genesis. He was originally commissioned to paint only twelve figures, the Apostles. He turned down the commission because he saw himself as a sculptor, not a painter. The Pope offered to allow Michelangelo to paint biblical scenes of his own choice as a compromise. After the work was finished, there were more than three hundred figures. His figures showed the creation, Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, and the Great Flood.

The painted area is about 40 m (131 ft) long by 13 m (43 ft) wide. This means that Michelangelo painted well over 5,000 square feet (460 m2) of frescoes.[29]

The Last Judgement edit

 
The Last Judgement as it exists today

The Last Judgement was painted by Michelangelo from 1535 to 1541, between two important historic events: the Sack of Rome by mercenary forces of the Holy Roman Empire in 1527, and the Council of Trent which commenced in 1545. The work was designed on a grand scale, and spans the entire wall behind the altar of the Sistine Chapel. The painting depicts the second coming of Christ on the Day of Judgment as described in the Revelation of John, Chapter 20. High on the wall is the heroic figure of Christ, with the saints clustered in groups around him. At the bottom left of the painting the dead are raised from their graves and ascend to be judged. To the right are those who are assigned to Hell and are dragged down by demons.

The Last Judgement was an object of a bitter dispute between Cardinal Carafa and Michelangelo. Because he depicted naked figures, the artist was accused of immorality and obscenity. A censorship campaign (known as the "Fig-Leaf Campaign") was organized by Carafa and Monsignor Sernini (Mantua's ambassador) to remove the frescoes. From this campaign drew support for the more natural state of the figures. In response, phallic imagery began permeating throughout Vatican City, beginning the trend of the crude drawings in places such as in graffiti art in bathrooms, textbooks, and other public places to be easily found. This trend continues to the present day.

The Pope's Master of Ceremonies Biagio da Cesena said "it was most disgraceful that in so sacred a place there should have been depicted all those nude figures, exposing themselves so shamefully, and that it was no work for a papal chapel but rather for the public baths and taverns."[30] In response Michelangelo worked da Cesena's semblance into the scene as Minos, judge of the underworld. It is said that when he complained to the Pope, the pontiff responded that his jurisdiction did not extend to hell, so the portrait would have to remain. Michelangelo also painted his own portrait, on the flayed skin held by St Bartholomew.

The genitalia in the fresco were later covered by the artist Daniele da Volterra, whom history remembers by the derogatory nickname "Il Braghettone" ("the breeches-painter").

Restoration and controversy edit

The Sistine Chapel's ceiling restoration began on 7 November 1984. When the restoration was completed, the chapel was re-opened to the public on 8 April 1994. The part of the restoration in the Sistine Chapel that has caused the most concern is the ceiling, painted by Michelangelo. The emergence of the brightly coloured Ancestors of Christ from the gloom sparked a reaction of fear that the processes being employed in the cleaning were too severe and removed the original intent of the artist.

 
Daniel, before and after the restoration

The problem lies in the analysis and understanding of the techniques utilised by Michelangelo, and the technical response of the restorers to that understanding. A close examination of the frescoes of the lunettes convinced the restorers that Michelangelo worked exclusively in "buon fresco"; that is, the artist worked only on freshly laid plaster and each section of work was completed while the plaster was still in its fresh state. In other words, they believed Michelangelo did not work "a secco"; he did not come back later and add details onto the dry plaster.

The restorers, by assuming that the artist took a universal approach to the painting, have taken a universal approach to the restoration. A decision was made that all of the shadowy layer of animal glue and "lamp black", all of the wax, and all of the overpainted areas were contamination of one sort or another: smoke deposits, earlier restoration attempts, and painted definition by later restorers in an attempt to enliven the appearance of the work. Based on this decision, according to Arguimbau's critical reading of the restoration data that have been provided, the chemists of the restoration team decided upon a solvent that would effectively strip the ceiling down to its paint-impregnated plaster. After treatment, only that which was painted "buon fresco" would remain.[31]

Replicas edit

The only reproduction of the Sistine Chapel ceiling was painted by Gary Bevans at English Martyrs' Catholic Church in Goring-by-Sea, Worthing, West Sussex, England.[32] A full-size architectural and photographic replica of the entire building was commissioned by the Mexican Government and funded by private donors.[33] It was on view at Mexico City from 1 June to 15 July 2016. It took 2.6 million high definition photographs to reproduce the totality of the frescoes and tapestries.[34] A video of the history of the chapel is shown to the visitors before entering the building; inside, a light-and-sound demonstration explains the content of each of the frescoes.

Quotes on Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine Chapel edit

Without having seen the Sistine Chapel one can form no appreciable idea of what one man is capable of achieving.

— Johann Wolfgang Goethe, 23 August 1787, [35]

This work has been and truly is a beacon of our art, and it has brought such benefit and enlightenment to the art of painting that it was sufficient to illuminate a world which for so many hundreds of years had remained in the state of darkness. And, to tell the truth, anyone who is a painter no longer needs to concern himself about seeing innovations and inventions, new ways of painting poses, clothing on figures, and various awe-inspiring details, for Michelangelo gave to this work all the perfection that can be given to such details.

— Giorgio Vasari on Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine Chapel

Music edit

Since the chapel's inception, the Sistine Chapel Choir has sung without the accompaniment of musical instruments as instruments were not permitted to be played inside the chapel.[36] This was problematic as there was no way of giving the musical starting pitch to the choir. Instead of allowing an instrument to give the starting pitch, the solution was to allow the individual singing first to choose the starting pitch. This instruction was given after an apostolic visitation of the choir in 1630:

Quando si ha da cominciare a cantare ciascuno lasci cominciare il più vecchio, quale se non intonata bene dovere essere puntato con rigore.[37]

On February 19, 2014, Canadian violinist Rosemary Siemens became the first solo instrumentalist to perform at the Sistine Chapel.[38] The historic performance was for an event entitled Spiritual Elevation as part of the Fondazione Pro Musical e Arte Sacra where Siemens was a featured guest soloist alongside vocalist Mary Zilba and harpist Mark Edward Spencer.[39] Siemens, Zilba, and Spencer performed a medley that included the hymns "Amazing Grace" and "Be Thou My Vision".[40] The historic performance took place in concert with the Continuo Arts Symphonic Chorus, led by conductor Candace Wicke.[41] Siemens also joined the Continuo Arts Symphonic Chorus for a Requiem entitled "Requiem For My Mother", composed by Stephen Edwards.

On April 29, 2016, The Edge (U2) became the first rock artist to stage a contemporary music concert at the chapel as part of a conference on regenerative medicines entitled Cellular Horizons.[42] The Edge performed "Walk On", "Yahweh", "Ordinary Love", by U2 as well as a Leonard Cohen cover of "If It Be Your Will" backed by an Irish Choir.[43]

In 2017, Cecilia Bartoli became the first woman to perform alongside the all-male Sistine Chapel Choir. Bartoli performed Beata Viscera by medieval composer Pérotin.[44]

The first ever live-streamed concert at the chapel took place on April 22, 2018, featuring a performance of Scottish composer James MacMillian's version of the Stabat Mater by the British Choir group The Sixteen and chamber orchestra ensemble Britten Sinfonia.[45] The concert was attended live by over three hundred people and streamed live over the website of Classic FM.

See also edit

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ a b c d Ekelund, Hébert & Tollison 2006, p. 313
  2. ^ Vatican City, Whc.unesco.org, retrieved 9 August 2011
  3. ^ Pietrangeli 1986, p. 28
  4. ^ Monfasani, John (1983), "A Description of the Sistine Chapel under Pope Sixtus IV", Artibus et Historiae, IRSA s.c., 4 (7): 9–18, doi:10.2307/1483178, ISSN 0391-9064, JSTOR 1483178.
  5. ^ Gardner, Helen (1970) Art through the Ages, p. 469, Harcourt, Brace and World. ISBN 978-0-15-508315-8
  6. ^ Robert Coughlan, The World of Michelangelo, Time-Life International, (1966) p. 116
  7. ^ Robert Coughlan, p. 127
  8. ^ "Gioacchino da Fiore ispirò Michelangelo". November 2012.
  9. ^ Pietrangeli 1986, p. 24
  10. ^ a b c d e John Shearman, "The Chapel of Sixtus IV". In Pietrangeli 1986
  11. ^ "The Sistine Chapel", Vatican Museums, retrieved 9 August 2013
  12. ^ Stevens, Abel & Floy, James. "Allegri's Miserere". The National Magazine, Carlton & Phillip, 1854. 531.
  13. ^ Saunders, Fr. William P. "". Arlington Catholic Herald, 17 March 2005. Retrieved on 2 June 2008.
  14. ^ Chambers, D. S. (1978), "Papal Conclaves and Prophetic Mystery in the Sistine Chapel", Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, The Warburg Institute, 41: 322–326, doi:10.2307/750878, JSTOR 750878, S2CID 195032159.
  15. ^ "Interesting Conclave Facts". ewtn.com.
  16. ^ Osborne, Harold; Brigstocke, Hugh (2001). "Michelangelo Buonarroti". In Brigstocke, Hugh (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Western Art (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 474–476. doi:10.1093/acref/9780198662037.001.0001. ISBN 0-19-866203-3.
  17. ^ O'Malley, John (1986). ""The Theology Behind Michelangelo's Ceiling"". The Sistine Chapel: The Art, the History, and the Restoration. p. 128.
  18. ^ Hersey 1993, p. 180
  19. ^ Talvacchia 2007, p. 150
  20. ^ Talvacchia 2007, p. 152
  21. ^ Cheney, Iris. Review of "Raphael's Cartoons in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen and the Tapestries for the Sistine Chapel" by John Shearman. The Art Bulletin, Volume 56, No. 4, December 1974. 607–609.
  22. ^ Oliveira, Paulo Martins "The Sistine Chapel and the two Testaments", 2013, (online, academia.edu)
  23. ^ Marinazzo, Adriano (2013). "Ipotesi su un disegno michelangiolesco del foglio XIII, 175 v, dell'Archivio Buonarroti". Commentari d'arte. 52–53: 108–110.
  24. ^ Graham-Dixon 2009, p. 2
  25. ^ Stollhans, Cynthia (1988), "Michelangelo's Nude Saint Catherine of Alexandria", Woman's Art Journal, Woman's Art, Inc., 19 (1): 26–30, doi:10.2307/1358651, ISSN 0270-7993, JSTOR 1358651.
  26. ^ Graham-Dixon 2009, p. 1
  27. ^ Graham-Dixon 2009, p. xi
  28. ^ 7 Things You May Not Know About the Sistine Chapel
  29. ^ , archived from the original on 22 August 2011, retrieved 31 January 2011
  30. ^ Vasari 1987, p. 379
  31. ^ Arguimbau, Peter Layne (5 October 2006). . Arguimbau. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
  32. ^ Welcome to The Sistine Chapel Reproduction United Kingdom
  33. ^ Vatican Approves $2.4 Million Replica of Sistine Chapel in Mexico City, 9 June 2016
  34. ^ "Full-size replica of Vatican's Sistine Chapel opens in Mexico City", Reuters, 9 June 2016
  35. ^ Letter. Original: (in German) Ich kann euch nicht ausdrücken, wie sehr ich euch zu mir gewünscht habe, damit ihr nur einen Begriff hättet, was ein einziger und ganzer Mensch machen und ausrichten kann; ohne die Sixtinische Kapelle gesehen zu haben, kann man sich keinen anschauenden Begriff machen, was ein Mensch vermag. Italian Journey, 2nd journey to Rome.Italienische Reise, Teil 21
  36. ^ Garretson, Robert (1993). Choral Music History, Style, and Performance Practice. Prentice Hall. p. 23. ISBN 0131371916.
  37. ^ Kreitner, Kenneth (2017). Renaissance Music. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1351551465.
  38. ^ Butz, Melissa (1 December 2019). "First violinist to play in Sistine Chapel hopes to one day play for the pope". Rome Reports.
  39. ^ McLellan, Wendy (4 May 2016). "Vancouver violinist edges out U2 guitarist to play the Sistine Chapel". The Province.
  40. ^ "Sistine Chapel-1st Violinist EVER allowed to play since 1473 Amazing Grace, Rosemary Siemens, violin". YouTube. 20 December 2014. Archived at Ghostarchive and the .
  41. ^ "Continuo Arts Chorus to perform at the Sistine Chapel". NJ.com. 20 January 2014.
  42. ^ Denham, Jess (3 May 2016). "The Edge becomes first rock star to play the Sistine Chapel". Independent.
  43. ^ Kreps, Daniel (2 May 2016). "Watch U2's the Edge Perform Sistine Chapel Concert". Rolling Stone.
  44. ^ Guiffrida, Angela (19 November 2017). "Sistine Chapel breaks 500-year gender taboo to welcome soprano into the choir". The Guardian.
  45. ^ Carrier, Fanny (23 April 2018). "Vatican streams first live concert from Sistine Chapel". The Local.
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  • Ekelund, Robert B.; Hébert, Robert F.; Tollison, Robert D. (2006), The Marketplace of Christianity, Cambridge: MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-05082-X
  • Graham-Dixon, Andrew (2009) [2008], Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 9781602393684
  • Hersey, George (1993), High Renaissance Art in St. Peter's and the Vatican, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-32782-5
  • Michelangelo (1999), Bull, George (ed.), Michelangelo, Life, Letters, and Poetry, Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-283770-2
  • Pietrangeli, Carlo, ed. (1986), The Sistine Chapel, New York: Harmony Books, ISBN 0-517-56274-X
  • Seymour, Charles (1972), Michelangelo, the Sistine Chapel Ceiling: illustrations, introductory essays, backgrounds and sources, critical essay, New York: W. W. Norton, ISBN 0-393-04319-3
  • Stinger, Charles (1998), The Renaissance in Rome, Bloomington: Indianapolis, ISBN 0-253-21208-1
  • Talvacchia, Bette (2007), Raphael, Oxford Oxfordshire: Phaidon Press, ISBN 978-0-7148-4786-3
  • Vasari, Giorgio (1987), The Lives of the Artists, George Bull, New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-044500-5
  • Wright, Lawrence (1983), Perspective in Perspective, London: Routledge & K. Paul, ISBN 0-7100-0791-4
  • Paolucci, Antonio (2016), La Cappella Sistina, Bologna: Edizioni Musei Vaticani - Scripta Maneant Editore, p. 254

Further reading edit

  • Ettlinger, Leopold (1965), The Sistine Chapel before Michelangelo: Religious Imagery and Papal Primacy, Oxford: Clarendon Press, OCLC 230168041
  • King, Ross (2003), Michelangelo & the Pope's Ceiling, New York: Penguin Books, ISBN 0-14-200369-7
  • Lewine, Carol (1993), The Sistine Chapel Walls and the Roman Liturgy, University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, ISBN 0-271-00792-3
  • Hirst, Michael; Colalucci, Gianluigi; Mancinelli, Fabrizio; Shearman, John; Winner, Matthias; Maeder, Edward; De Vecchi, Pierluigi; Nazzareno, Gabrielli; et al. (1994), Pietrangeli, Carlo (ed.), The Sistine Chapel: A Glorious Restoration, Takashi Okamura (photographer), New York: H.N. Abrams, ISBN 0-8109-3840-5
  • Pfeiffer, Heinrich (2007), Die Sixtinische Kapelle neu entdeckt (in German), Stuttgart: Belser, ISBN 978-0-8109-3840-3
  • Stone, Irving (2004), The Agony and the Ecstasy, London: Nal Trade, ISBN 0-451-21323-8. Previously publish by Doubleday in 1961; a novel.
  • Blech, Benjamin; Doliner, Roy (2008), The Sistine Secrets: Michelangelo's Forbidden Messages in the Heart of the Vatican, New York: HarperOne, ISBN 978-0-06-146904-6
  • The Vatican: spirit and art of Christian Rome. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1982. ISBN 0-87099-348-8.

External links edit

  • Vatican Museums Online: Sistine Chapel A virtual detailed tour of the frescoes and panels
  • High-resolution interactive virtual tour of the Sistine Chapel
  • The Devilish Chapel of Michelangelo
  • Web Gallery of Art: Visit to the Sistine Chapel in Vatican
  • BBC News: Sistine Chapel Restored (1999)
  • Master Plan & Pictures

sistine, chapel, latin, sacellum, sixtinum, italian, cappella, sistina, kapˈpɛlla, siˈstiːna, chapel, apostolic, palace, pope, official, residence, vatican, city, originally, known, cappella, magna, great, chapel, chapel, takes, name, from, pope, sixtus, built. The Sistine Chapel ˌ s ɪ s ˈ t iː n ˈ tʃ ae p el Latin Sacellum Sixtinum Italian Cappella Sistina kapˈpɛlla siˈstiːna is a chapel in the Apostolic Palace the pope s official residence in Vatican City Originally known as the Cappella Magna Great Chapel the chapel takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV who had it built between 1473 and 1481 Since that time the chapel has served as a place of both religious and functionary papal activity Today it is the site of the papal conclave the process by which a new pope is selected The fame of the Sistine Chapel lies mainly in the frescoes that decorate the interior most particularly the Sistine Chapel ceiling and The Last Judgment both by Michelangelo Sistine ChapelSacellum Sixtinum Latin Cappella Sistina Italian East side of the Chapel from the altar endReligionAffiliationRoman CatholicDistrictDiocese of RomeEcclesiastical or organizational statusPapal oratoryLeadershipFrancisYear consecrated15 August 1483LocationLocationVatican CityLocation on a map of Vatican CityGeographic coordinates41 54 11 N 12 27 16 E 41 90306 N 12 45444 E 41 90306 12 45444ArchitectureArchitect s Baccio Pontelli Giovanni de Dolci 1 TypeChurchGroundbreaking1505 1 Completed1508 1 SpecificationsLength40 9 metres 134 ft Width nave 13 4 metres 44 ft Height max 20 7 metres 68 ft UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial name Vatican CityTypeCulturalCriteriai ii iv viDesignated1984 2 Reference no 286State PartyHoly SeeRegionEurope and North AmericaWebsitemv wbr vatican wbr vaRome Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles During the reign of Sixtus IV a team of Renaissance painters that included Sandro Botticelli Pietro Perugino Pinturicchio Domenico Ghirlandaio and Cosimo Rosselli created a series of frescos depicting the Life of Moses and the Life of Christ offset by papal portraits above and trompe l œil drapery below These paintings were completed in 1482 and on 15 August 1483 Sixtus IV celebrated the first mass in the Sistine Chapel for the Feast of the Assumption at which ceremony the chapel was consecrated and dedicated to the Virgin Mary 3 4 Between 1508 and 1512 under the patronage of Pope Julius II Michelangelo painted the chapel s ceiling a project that changed the course of Western art and is regarded as one of the major artistic accomplishments of human civilization 5 6 In a different political climate after the Sack of Rome he returned and between 1535 and 1541 painted The Last Judgment for Popes Clement VII and Paul III 7 The fame of Michelangelo s paintings has drawn multitudes of visitors to the chapel ever since they were revealed five hundred years ago According to recent studies the Sistine Chapel is influenced by the thought of Joachim of Fiore The monk and philosopher thus influenced the vision and the iconographic project for the representation of the Last Judgment Michelangelo s frescoes with an eschatological theme are therefore an artistic development of the various Joachim writings of the 12th century about the apocalypse and the last days 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Papal conclave 2 Architecture 2 1 Structure 2 2 Interior of the Sistine Chapel 3 Decoration 3 1 History 4 Frescoes 4 1 Southern wall 4 2 Northern wall 4 3 Eastern wall 4 4 Michelangelo s frescoes 4 4 1 Ceiling 4 4 2 The Last Judgement 5 Restoration and controversy 6 Replicas 7 Quotes on Michelangelo s frescoes in the Sistine Chapel 8 Music 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editWhile known as the location of papal conclaves the primary function of the Sistine Chapel is as the chapel of the Papal Chapel Cappella Pontificia one of the two bodies of the papal household called until 1968 the Papal Court Pontificalis Aula At the time of Pope Sixtus IV in the late 15th century the Papal Chapel comprised about 200 people including clerics officials of the Vatican and distinguished laity There were 50 occasions during the year on which it was prescribed by the Papal Calendar that the whole Papal Chapel should meet 9 Of these 50 occasions 35 were masses of which 8 were held in basilicas in general St Peter s and were attended by large congregations These included the Christmas Day and Easter masses at which the Pope himself was the celebrant The other 27 masses could be held in a smaller less public space for which the Cappella Maggiore was used before it was rebuilt on the same site as the Sistine Chapel The Cappella Maggiore derived its name the Greater Chapel from the fact that there was another chapel also in use by the Pope and his retinue for daily worship At the time of Pope Sixtus IV this was the Chapel of Pope Nicholas V which had been decorated by Fra Angelico The Cappella Maggiore is recorded as existing in 1368 According to a communication from Andreas of Trebizond to Pope Sixtus IV by the time of its demolition to make way for the present chapel the Cappella Maggiorewas in a ruinous state with its walls leaning 10 nbsp The Sistine Chapel as it may have appeared in the 15th century 19th century drawing The present chapel on the site of the Cappella Maggiore was designed by Baccio Pontelli for Pope Sixtus IV for whom it is named and built under the supervision of Giovannino de Dolci between 1473 and 1481 1 The proportions of the present chapel appear to closely follow those of the original After its completion the chapel was decorated with frescoes by a number of the most famous artists of the High Renaissance including Sandro Botticelli Domenico Ghirlandaio Pietro Perugino and Michelangelo 10 The first mass in the Sistine Chapel was celebrated on 15 August 1483 the Feast of the Assumption at which ceremony the chapel was consecrated and dedicated to the Virgin Mary 11 The Sistine Chapel has maintained its function to the present day and continues to host the important services of the Papal Calendar unless the Pope is travelling There is a permanent choir the Sistine Chapel Choir for whom much original music has been written the most famous piece being Gregorio Allegri s Miserere 12 Papal conclave edit Main article Papal conclave One of the functions of the Sistine Chapel is as a venue for the election of each successive pope in a conclave of the College of Cardinals On the occasion of a conclave a chimney is installed in the roof of the chapel from which smoke arises as a signal If white smoke which is created by burning the ballots of the election appears a new Pope has been elected If no candidate receives the required two thirds vote the cardinals send up black smoke created by burning the ballots along with wet straw and chemical additives it means that no successful election has yet occurred 13 The first papal conclave to be held on the Sistine Chapel was the conclave of 1492 which took place from 6 to 11 August of the same year and in which Pope Alexander VI also known as Rodrigo Borja was elected The conclave also provided for the cardinals a space in which they could hear mass and in which they could eat sleep and pass time attended by servants From 1455 conclaves have been held in the Vatican Palace until the Great Schism they were held in the Dominican convent of Santa Maria sopra Minerva 14 Since 1996 John Paul II s Apostolic Constitution Universi Dominici gregis requires the cardinals to be lodged in the Domus Sanctae Marthae during a papal conclave but to continue to vote in the Sistine Chapel 15 Canopies for each cardinal elector were once used during conclaves a sign of equal dignity After the new Pope accepts his election he would give his new name at this time the other Cardinals would tug on a rope attached to their seats to lower their canopies Until reforms instituted by Saint Pius X the canopies were of different colours to designate which Cardinals had been appointed by which Pope Paul VI abolished the canopies altogether since under his papacy the population of the College of Cardinals had increased so much to the point that they would need to be seated in rows of two against the walls making the canopies obstruct the view of the cardinals in the back row In the wake of a conclave taking place to preserve the integrity of the marble floor on the Sistine Chapel carpenters install a slightly elevated wooden floor alongside a wooden ramp in the entrance for those Cardinals who for one reason or another need to be transported in a wheelchair Architecture editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sistine Chapel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Structure edit nbsp Exterior of the Sistine ChapelThe chapel is about 35 metres 118 feet long and 14 m 46 ft wide 16 with the ceiling rising to about 20 m 66 ft above the main floor 10 28 17 Its exterior is unadorned by architectural or decorative details as is common in many Italian churches of the Medieval and Renaissance eras It has no exterior facade or exterior processional doorways as the ingress has always been from internal rooms within the Apostolic Palace Papal Palace and the exterior can be seen only from nearby windows and light wells in the palace Subsidence and cracking of masonry also have affected the Cappella Maggiore necessitating the building of very large buttresses to brace the exterior walls The accretion of other buildings has further altered the exterior appearance of the chapel The building is divided into three stories of which the lowest is a very tall basement level with several utilitarian windows and a doorway giving onto the exterior court Internally the basement is robustly vaulted to support the chapel The building had six tall arched windows down each side and two at either end several of which have been blocked Above the vault is a third story with wardrooms for guards At this level an open projecting gangway was constructed which encircled the building supported on an arcade springing from the walls The gangway has been roofed as it was a continual source of water leaking into the vault of the chapel Interior of the Sistine Chapel edit The general proportions of the chapel use the length as the unit of measurement This has been divided by three to get the width and by two to get the height Maintaining the ratio there were six windows down each side and two at either end Defined proportions were a feature of Renaissance architecture and reflected the growing interest in the Classical heritage of Rome nbsp A reconstruction of the appearance of the west Wall chapel in the 1480s prior to the painting of the ceiling nbsp Drawing by Pinturicchio of Perugino s lost Assumption in the Sistine Chapel nbsp Raphael tapestries in the Sistine ChapelThe ceiling of the chapel is a flattened barrel vault springing from a course that encircles the walls at the level of the springing of the window arches This barrel vault is cut transversely by smaller vaults over each window which divide the barrel vault at its lowest level into a series of large pendentives rising from shallow pilasters between each window The barrel vault was originally painted brilliant blue and dotted with gold stars to the design of Piermatteo Lauro de Manfredi da Amelia 10 The pavement is in opus alexandrinum a decorative style using marble and coloured stone in a pattern that reflects the earlier proportion in the division of the interior and also marks the processional way from the main door used by the Pope on important occasions such as Palm Sunday A screen or transenna in marble by Mino da Fiesole Andrea Bregno and Giovanni Dalmata divides the chapel into two parts 18 Originally these made equal space for the members of the Papal Chapel within the sanctuary near the altar and the pilgrims and townsfolk without However with growth in the number of those attending the Pope the screen was moved giving a reduced area for the faithful laity The transenna is surmounted by a row of ornate candlesticks once gilt and has a wooden door where once there was an ornate door of gilded wrought iron The sculptors of the transenna also provided the cantoria or projecting choir gallery Decoration edit nbsp Diagram of part of the vertical fresco decoration of the Sistine ChapelHistory edit The first stage in the decoration of the Sistine Chapel was the painting of the ceiling in blue studded with gilt stars 10 and with decorative borders around the architectural details of the pendentives This was entirely replaced when Michelangelo came to work on the ceiling in 1508 Of the present scheme of frescos the earliest part is that of the side walls They are divided into three main tiers The central tier of the walls has two cycles of paintings which complement each other The Life of Moses and The Life of Christ They were commissioned in 1480 by Pope Sixtus IV and executed by Domenico Ghirlandaio Sandro Botticelli Pietro Perugino Cosimo Rosselli and their workshops They originally ran all round the walls but have since been replaced on both end walls The project was perhaps supervised by Perugino who arrived at the chapel prior to the Florentines It is probable that the commission of Ghirlandaio Botticelli and Roselli was part of a reconciliation project between Lorenzo de Medici the de facto ruler of Florence and Pope Sixtus IV The Florentines started to work in the Sistine Chapel in the spring of 1481 Beneath the cycles of The Life of Moses and The Life of Christ the lower level of the walls is decorated with frescoed hangings in silver and gold Above the narrative frescos the upper tier is divided into two zones At the lower level of the windows is a Gallery of Popes painted at the same time as the Lives Around the arched tops of the windows are areas known as the lunettes which contain the Ancestors of Christ painted by Michelangelo as part of the scheme for the ceiling The ceiling was commissioned by Pope Julius II and painted by Michelangelo between 1508 and 1512 The commission was originally to paint the twelve apostles on the triangular pendentives which support the vault however Michelangelo demanded a free hand in the pictorial content of the scheme He painted a series of nine pictures showing God s Creation of the World God s Relationship with Mankind and Mankind s Fall from God s Grace On the large pendentives he painted twelve Biblical and Classical men and women who prophesied that God would send Jesus Christ for the salvation of mankind and around the upper parts of the windows the Ancestors of Christ In 1515 Raphael was commissioned by Pope Leo X to design a series of ten tapestries to hang around the lower tier of the walls 19 The tapestries depict events from the Life of St Peter four tapestries the Life of St Paul six tapestries the founders of the Christian Church in Rome as described in the Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles Work began in mid 1515 Due to their large size manufacture of the hangings was carried out in Brussels and took four years under the hands of the weavers in the shop of Pieter van Aelst 20 Raphael s tapestries were looted during the Sack of Rome in 1527 and were either burnt for their precious metal content or were scattered around Europe In the late 20th century a set was reassembled from several further sets that had been made after the first set and displayed again in the Sistine Chapel in 1983 The tapestries continue to be used at occasional ceremonies of particular importance The full size preparatory cartoons for seven of the 10 tapestries are known as the Raphael Cartoons and are in London 21 At this point the decorative scheme displayed a consistent iconographical pattern The tier of Popes which in the scheme intended by Pope Julius would have appeared immediately below the Twelve Apostles would have emphasised the apostolic succession It has been argued that the present scheme shows the two Biblical Testaments merged in order to reveal the Old predicting and framing the New synthesizing the logic of the Christian Bible 22 This was disrupted by a further commission to Michelangelo to decorate the wall above the altar with The Last Judgment 1537 1541 The painting of this scene necessitated the obliteration of two episodes from the Lives the Nativity of Jesus and the Finding of Moses several of the Popes and two sets of Ancestors Frescoes edit nbsp Trials of Moses by BotticelliSouthern wall edit The southern wall is decorated with the Stories of Moses painted in 1481 1482 Starting from the altar they include Moses Leaving for Egypt by Pietro Perugino and assistants The Trials of Moses by Sandro Botticelli and his workshop The Crossing of the Red Sea by Cosimo Rosselli Domenico Ghirlandaio or Biagio di Antonio Tucci Descent from Mount Sinai by Cosimo Rosselli or Piero di Cosimo Punishment of the Rebels by Sandro Botticelli Testament and Death of Moses by Luca Signorelli or Bartolomeo della Gatta nbsp Moses Leaving for Egypt nbsp Punishment of the RebelsNorthern wall edit nbsp The Delivery of the Keys by PeruginoThe northern wall houses the Stories of Jesus dating to 1481 1482 They include Baptism of Christ by Pietro Perugino and assistants Temptations of Christ by Sandro Botticelli Vocation of the Apostles by Domenico Ghirlandaio The Sermon on the Mount attributed to Cosimo Rosselli The Delivery of the Keys by Pietro Perugino The Last Supper by Cosimo Rosselli nbsp Sermon on the Mount nbsp The Delivery of the KeysEastern wall edit nbsp Resurrection of ChristResurrection of Christ by Hendrick van den Broeck 1572 over Domenico Ghirlandaio s original Disputation over Moses Body by Matteo da Lecce 1574 over Luca Signorelli s originalMichelangelo s frescoes edit nbsp The Creation of Adam by MichelangeloMichelangelo was commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1508 to repaint the vault or ceiling of the chapel 23 The work was completed between 1508 and late 1512 24 He painted the Last Judgment over the altar between 1535 and 1541 on commission from Pope Paul III Farnese 25 Michelangelo was intimidated by the scale of the commission and made it known from the outset of Julius II s approach that he would prefer to decline He felt he was more of a sculptor than a painter and was suspicious that such a large scale project was being offered to him by enemies as a set up for an inevitable fall For Michelangelo the project was a distraction from the major marble sculpture that had preoccupied him for the previous few years 26 The sources of Michelangelo s inspiration are not easily determined both Joachite and Augustinian theologians were within the sphere of Julius influence 27 Ceiling edit Main article Sistine Chapel ceiling See also Gallery of Sistine Chapel ceiling nbsp A section of the Sistine Chapel ceilingTo be able to reach the ceiling Michelangelo needed a support the first idea was by Julius favoured architect Donato Bramante who wanted to build for him a scaffold to be suspended in the air with ropes However Bramante did not successfully complete the task and the structure he built was flawed He had perforated the vault in order to lower strings to secure the scaffold Michelangelo laughed when he saw the structure and believed it would leave holes in the ceiling once the work was ended He asked Bramante what was to happen when the painter reached the perforations but the architect had no answer The matter was taken before the Pope who ordered Michelangelo to build a scaffold of his own Michelangelo created a flat wooden platform on brackets built out from holes in the wall high up near the top of the windows Contrary to popular belief he did not lie on this scaffolding while he painted but painted from a standing position 28 Michelangelo used bright colours easily visible from the floor On the lowest part of the ceiling he painted the ancestors of Christ Above this he alternated male and female prophets with Jonah over the altar On the highest section Michelangelo painted nine stories from the Book of Genesis He was originally commissioned to paint only twelve figures the Apostles He turned down the commission because he saw himself as a sculptor not a painter The Pope offered to allow Michelangelo to paint biblical scenes of his own choice as a compromise After the work was finished there were more than three hundred figures His figures showed the creation Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden and the Great Flood The painted area is about 40 m 131 ft long by 13 m 43 ft wide This means that Michelangelo painted well over 5 000 square feet 460 m2 of frescoes 29 The Last Judgement edit Main article The Last Judgment Michelangelo This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Last Judgement as it exists today The Last Judgement was painted by Michelangelo from 1535 to 1541 between two important historic events the Sack of Rome by mercenary forces of the Holy Roman Empire in 1527 and the Council of Trent which commenced in 1545 The work was designed on a grand scale and spans the entire wall behind the altar of the Sistine Chapel The painting depicts the second coming of Christ on the Day of Judgment as described in the Revelation of John Chapter 20 High on the wall is the heroic figure of Christ with the saints clustered in groups around him At the bottom left of the painting the dead are raised from their graves and ascend to be judged To the right are those who are assigned to Hell and are dragged down by demons The Last Judgement was an object of a bitter dispute between Cardinal Carafa and Michelangelo Because he depicted naked figures the artist was accused of immorality and obscenity A censorship campaign known as the Fig Leaf Campaign was organized by Carafa and Monsignor Sernini Mantua s ambassador to remove the frescoes From this campaign drew support for the more natural state of the figures In response phallic imagery began permeating throughout Vatican City beginning the trend of the crude drawings in places such as in graffiti art in bathrooms textbooks and other public places to be easily found This trend continues to the present day The Pope s Master of Ceremonies Biagio da Cesena said it was most disgraceful that in so sacred a place there should have been depicted all those nude figures exposing themselves so shamefully and that it was no work for a papal chapel but rather for the public baths and taverns 30 In response Michelangelo worked da Cesena s semblance into the scene as Minos judge of the underworld It is said that when he complained to the Pope the pontiff responded that his jurisdiction did not extend to hell so the portrait would have to remain Michelangelo also painted his own portrait on the flayed skin held by St Bartholomew The genitalia in the fresco were later covered by the artist Daniele da Volterra whom history remembers by the derogatory nickname Il Braghettone the breeches painter Restoration and controversy editMain article Restoration of the Sistine Chapel frescoes The Sistine Chapel s ceiling restoration began on 7 November 1984 When the restoration was completed the chapel was re opened to the public on 8 April 1994 The part of the restoration in the Sistine Chapel that has caused the most concern is the ceiling painted by Michelangelo The emergence of the brightly coloured Ancestors of Christ from the gloom sparked a reaction of fear that the processes being employed in the cleaning were too severe and removed the original intent of the artist nbsp Daniel before and after the restorationThe problem lies in the analysis and understanding of the techniques utilised by Michelangelo and the technical response of the restorers to that understanding A close examination of the frescoes of the lunettes convinced the restorers that Michelangelo worked exclusively in buon fresco that is the artist worked only on freshly laid plaster and each section of work was completed while the plaster was still in its fresh state In other words they believed Michelangelo did not work a secco he did not come back later and add details onto the dry plaster The restorers by assuming that the artist took a universal approach to the painting have taken a universal approach to the restoration A decision was made that all of the shadowy layer of animal glue and lamp black all of the wax and all of the overpainted areas were contamination of one sort or another smoke deposits earlier restoration attempts and painted definition by later restorers in an attempt to enliven the appearance of the work Based on this decision according to Arguimbau s critical reading of the restoration data that have been provided the chemists of the restoration team decided upon a solvent that would effectively strip the ceiling down to its paint impregnated plaster After treatment only that which was painted buon fresco would remain 31 Replicas editThe only reproduction of the Sistine Chapel ceiling was painted by Gary Bevans at English Martyrs Catholic Church in Goring by Sea Worthing West Sussex England 32 A full size architectural and photographic replica of the entire building was commissioned by the Mexican Government and funded by private donors 33 It was on view at Mexico City from 1 June to 15 July 2016 It took 2 6 million high definition photographs to reproduce the totality of the frescoes and tapestries 34 A video of the history of the chapel is shown to the visitors before entering the building inside a light and sound demonstration explains the content of each of the frescoes Quotes on Michelangelo s frescoes in the Sistine Chapel editWithout having seen the Sistine Chapel one can form no appreciable idea of what one man is capable of achieving Johann Wolfgang Goethe 23 August 1787 35 This work has been and truly is a beacon of our art and it has brought such benefit and enlightenment to the art of painting that it was sufficient to illuminate a world which for so many hundreds of years had remained in the state of darkness And to tell the truth anyone who is a painter no longer needs to concern himself about seeing innovations and inventions new ways of painting poses clothing on figures and various awe inspiring details for Michelangelo gave to this work all the perfection that can be given to such details Giorgio Vasari on Michelangelo s frescoes in the Sistine ChapelMusic editSince the chapel s inception the Sistine Chapel Choir has sung without the accompaniment of musical instruments as instruments were not permitted to be played inside the chapel 36 This was problematic as there was no way of giving the musical starting pitch to the choir Instead of allowing an instrument to give the starting pitch the solution was to allow the individual singing first to choose the starting pitch This instruction was given after an apostolic visitation of the choir in 1630 Quando si ha da cominciare a cantare ciascuno lasci cominciare il piu vecchio quale se non intonata bene dovere essere puntato con rigore 37 On February 19 2014 Canadian violinist Rosemary Siemens became the first solo instrumentalist to perform at the Sistine Chapel 38 The historic performance was for an event entitled Spiritual Elevation as part of the Fondazione Pro Musical e Arte Sacra where Siemens was a featured guest soloist alongside vocalist Mary Zilba and harpist Mark Edward Spencer 39 Siemens Zilba and Spencer performed a medley that included the hymns Amazing Grace and Be Thou My Vision 40 The historic performance took place in concert with the Continuo Arts Symphonic Chorus led by conductor Candace Wicke 41 Siemens also joined the Continuo Arts Symphonic Chorus for a Requiem entitled Requiem For My Mother composed by Stephen Edwards On April 29 2016 The Edge U2 became the first rock artist to stage a contemporary music concert at the chapel as part of a conference on regenerative medicines entitled Cellular Horizons 42 The Edge performed Walk On Yahweh Ordinary Love by U2 as well as a Leonard Cohen cover of If It Be Your Will backed by an Irish Choir 43 In 2017 Cecilia Bartoli became the first woman to perform alongside the all male Sistine Chapel Choir Bartoli performed Beata Viscera by medieval composer Perotin 44 The first ever live streamed concert at the chapel took place on April 22 2018 featuring a performance of Scottish composer James MacMillian s version of the Stabat Mater by the British Choir group The Sixteen and chamber orchestra ensemble Britten Sinfonia 45 The concert was attended live by over three hundred people and streamed live over the website of Classic FM See also edit nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Vatican City portalArt patronage of Julius II Index of Vatican City related articles Santa Maria Maggiore The Agony and the Ecstasy film 1965 List of tourist attractions in RomeReferences editCitations a b c d Ekelund Hebert amp Tollison 2006 p 313 Vatican City Whc unesco org retrieved 9 August 2011 Pietrangeli 1986 p 28 Monfasani John 1983 A Description of the Sistine Chapel under Pope Sixtus IV Artibus et Historiae IRSA s c 4 7 9 18 doi 10 2307 1483178 ISSN 0391 9064 JSTOR 1483178 Gardner Helen 1970 Art through the Ages p 469 Harcourt Brace and World ISBN 978 0 15 508315 8 Robert Coughlan The World of Michelangelo Time Life International 1966 p 116 Robert Coughlan p 127 Gioacchino da Fiore ispiro Michelangelo November 2012 Pietrangeli 1986 p 24 a b c d e John Shearman The Chapel of Sixtus IV In Pietrangeli 1986 The Sistine Chapel Vatican Museums retrieved 9 August 2013 Stevens Abel amp Floy James Allegri s Miserere The National Magazine Carlton amp Phillip 1854 531 Saunders Fr William P The Path to the Papacy Arlington Catholic Herald 17 March 2005 Retrieved on 2 June 2008 Chambers D S 1978 Papal Conclaves and Prophetic Mystery in the Sistine Chapel Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes The Warburg Institute 41 322 326 doi 10 2307 750878 JSTOR 750878 S2CID 195032159 Interesting Conclave Facts ewtn com Osborne Harold Brigstocke Hugh 2001 Michelangelo Buonarroti In Brigstocke Hugh ed The Oxford Companion to Western Art 1st ed Oxford University Press pp 474 476 doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662037 001 0001 ISBN 0 19 866203 3 O Malley John 1986 The Theology Behind Michelangelo s Ceiling The Sistine Chapel The Art the History and the Restoration p 128 Hersey 1993 p 180 Talvacchia 2007 p 150 Talvacchia 2007 p 152 Cheney Iris Review of Raphael s Cartoons in the Collection of Her Majesty The Queen and the Tapestries for the Sistine Chapel by John Shearman The Art Bulletin Volume 56 No 4 December 1974 607 609 Oliveira Paulo Martins The Sistine Chapel and the two Testaments 2013 online academia edu Marinazzo Adriano 2013 Ipotesi su un disegno michelangiolesco del foglio XIII 175 v dell Archivio Buonarroti Commentari d arte 52 53 108 110 Graham Dixon 2009 p 2 Stollhans Cynthia 1988 Michelangelo s Nude Saint Catherine of Alexandria Woman s Art Journal Woman s Art Inc 19 1 26 30 doi 10 2307 1358651 ISSN 0270 7993 JSTOR 1358651 Graham Dixon 2009 p 1 Graham Dixon 2009 p xi 7 Things You May Not Know About the Sistine Chapel Michelangelo The Sistine Chapel Ceiling Seven Common Questions About the Frescoes archived from the original on 22 August 2011 retrieved 31 January 2011 Vasari 1987 p 379 Arguimbau Peter Layne 5 October 2006 Michelangelo s Cleaned off Sistine Chapel Arguimbau Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Welcome to The Sistine Chapel Reproduction United Kingdom Vatican Approves 2 4 Million Replica of Sistine Chapel in Mexico City 9 June 2016 Full size replica of Vatican s Sistine Chapel opens in Mexico City Reuters 9 June 2016 Letter Original in German Ich kann euch nicht ausdrucken wie sehr ich euch zu mir gewunscht habe damit ihr nur einen Begriff hattet was ein einziger und ganzer Mensch machen und ausrichten kann ohne die Sixtinische Kapelle gesehen zu haben kann man sich keinen anschauenden Begriff machen was ein Mensch vermag Italian Journey 2nd journey to Rome Italienische Reise Teil 21 Garretson Robert 1993 Choral Music History Style and Performance Practice Prentice Hall p 23 ISBN 0131371916 Kreitner Kenneth 2017 Renaissance Music Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1351551465 Butz Melissa 1 December 2019 First violinist to play in Sistine Chapel hopes to one day play for the pope Rome Reports McLellan Wendy 4 May 2016 Vancouver violinist edges out U2 guitarist to play the Sistine Chapel The Province Sistine Chapel 1st Violinist EVER allowed to play since 1473 Amazing Grace Rosemary Siemens violin YouTube 20 December 2014 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Continuo Arts Chorus to perform at the Sistine Chapel NJ com 20 January 2014 Denham Jess 3 May 2016 The Edge becomes first rock star to play the Sistine Chapel Independent Kreps Daniel 2 May 2016 Watch U2 s the Edge Perform Sistine Chapel Concert Rolling Stone Guiffrida Angela 19 November 2017 Sistine Chapel breaks 500 year gender taboo to welcome soprano into the choir The Guardian Carrier Fanny 23 April 2018 Vatican streams first live concert from Sistine Chapel The Local BibliographyDeimling Barbara 2000 Sandro Botticelli 1444 45 1510 Koln Taschen ISBN 3 8228 5992 3 Earls Irene 1987 Renaissance Art A Topical Dictionary Westport Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 24658 0 Ekelund Robert B Hebert Robert F Tollison Robert D 2006 The Marketplace of Christianity Cambridge MIT Press ISBN 0 262 05082 X Graham Dixon Andrew 2009 2008 Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 9781602393684 Hersey George 1993 High Renaissance Art in St Peter s and the Vatican Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 32782 5 Michelangelo 1999 Bull George ed Michelangelo Life Letters and Poetry Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283770 2 Pietrangeli Carlo ed 1986 The Sistine Chapel New York Harmony Books ISBN 0 517 56274 X Seymour Charles 1972 Michelangelo the Sistine Chapel Ceiling illustrations introductory essays backgrounds and sources critical essay New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 04319 3 Stinger Charles 1998 The Renaissance in Rome Bloomington Indianapolis ISBN 0 253 21208 1 Talvacchia Bette 2007 Raphael Oxford Oxfordshire Phaidon Press ISBN 978 0 7148 4786 3 Vasari Giorgio 1987 The Lives of the Artists George Bull New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 044500 5 Wright Lawrence 1983 Perspective in Perspective London Routledge amp K Paul ISBN 0 7100 0791 4 Paolucci Antonio 2016 La Cappella Sistina Bologna Edizioni Musei Vaticani Scripta Maneant Editore p 254Further reading editEttlinger Leopold 1965 The Sistine Chapel before Michelangelo Religious Imagery and Papal Primacy Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 230168041 King Ross 2003 Michelangelo amp the Pope s Ceiling New York Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 200369 7 Lewine Carol 1993 The Sistine Chapel Walls and the Roman Liturgy University Park Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0 271 00792 3 Hirst Michael Colalucci Gianluigi Mancinelli Fabrizio Shearman John Winner Matthias Maeder Edward De Vecchi Pierluigi Nazzareno Gabrielli et al 1994 Pietrangeli Carlo ed The Sistine Chapel A Glorious Restoration Takashi Okamura photographer New York H N Abrams ISBN 0 8109 3840 5 Pfeiffer Heinrich 2007 Die Sixtinische Kapelle neu entdeckt in German Stuttgart Belser ISBN 978 0 8109 3840 3 Stone Irving 2004 The Agony and the Ecstasy London Nal Trade ISBN 0 451 21323 8 Previously publish by Doubleday in 1961 a novel Blech Benjamin Doliner Roy 2008 The Sistine Secrets Michelangelo s Forbidden Messages in the Heart of the Vatican New York HarperOne ISBN 978 0 06 146904 6 The Vatican spirit and art of Christian Rome New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1982 ISBN 0 87099 348 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sistine Chapel Vatican Museums Online Sistine Chapel A virtual detailed tour of the frescoes and panels High resolution interactive virtual tour of the Sistine Chapel Zoomable Panoramic View of the Sistine Chapel HTML5 The Devilish Chapel of Michelangelo Web Gallery of Art Visit to the Sistine Chapel in Vatican BBC News Sistine Chapel Restored 1999 The Restoration of the Sistine Chapel Right or Wrong www christusrex org Capella Sistina Master Plan amp Pictures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sistine Chapel amp oldid 1190455845, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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