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- <text id=93TT2261>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: The Arts & Media:Art
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA, Page 58
- Art
- A Vision Of Judgment
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After a four-year cleaning, Michelangelo's epic fresco at the
- Sistine Chapel reasserts its power
- </p>
- <p>By John Moody/Rome--With reporting by Ann Natanson/Rome
- </p>
- <p> So overpowering was its impact that Pope Paul III, upon first
- seeing it, sank to his knees and murmured, "Lord, charge me
- not with my sins when thou shalt come on the Day of Judgment."
- Since being unveiled in 1541, Michelangelo's Last Judgment has
- been revered for its towering spiritual strength and enduring
- symbolism. The 40-by-45-ft. fresco on the west altar wall of
- the Sistine Chapel, on which Michelangelo labored for five years,
- is also a searing, unsparing personal document--both of the
- unsettled world in which Michelangelo lived and of the artist's
- inner torment and fear of approaching death.
- </p>
- <p> The exclusive selection of photographs on these pages provides
- the first extensive look at the newly cleaned Last Judgment,
- which will go on view in April at an Easter week Mass celebrated
- by Pope John Paul II. Its return to the public realm in dramatically
- improved condition will be an important event for both art and
- religion. Notes Kathleen Weil-Garris Brandt, a New York University
- art historian who has followed the project: "Our idea of what
- art tells us about God is shaped by Michelangelo more than anyone
- else, and by the Last Judgment more than any of his other works."
- </p>
- <p> The rendering of a final verdict is reflected in the Judgment
- more unmistakably than ever, particularly in the central figure
- of Christ. Although its cleaning is not yet complete--and
- hence the Vatican has released no color photos of it--the
- emerging image clearly shows that contrary to a previous assumption
- that Christ's expression is one of anger, it instead betrays
- impatience, as though He were saying, "Silence! Now I will pronounce
- judgment!" Even more significant, no one in the fresco except
- the Virgin Mary seems to know his own fate, and thus everyone
- looks fearful. Says Fabrizio Mancinelli, the Vatican's curator
- of Renaissance art: "Michelangelo's way of interpreting this
- theme--the uncertainty--was not in line with the church
- at the time. The church wanted to project itself as the only
- certainty."
- </p>
- <p> A controversial restoration of the chapel's 33-panel ceiling,
- which includes God's finger touching Adam's, was finished in
- 1989. Though some critics contend the process produced undesirable
- changes in color, the majority think it revealed the original
- hues used by Michelangelo in their pristine state. The Judgment,
- probably the world's most important example of fresco--a technique
- that involves applying water-based pigments to a still wet plaster
- wall--has not been seen by the public since 1990, when it
- was hidden behind draped scaffolding. As with the ceiling, its
- cleaner and brighter look, once revealed, is certain to generate
- debate. Says Mancinelli: "((The fresco)) wasn't painted in Tuscan
- color that you might associate with Michelangelo, who spent
- much of his life in Florence. Rather he used the warm palette
- of Venice. Obviously Michelangelo had seen the works of Titian
- and was influenced by them."
- </p>
- <p> The Last Judgment is a swirl of more than 300 figures. As Christ
- majestically takes a step forward at the center, saints, angels,
- the redeemed and damned gesticulate, struggle and cringe in
- the shared moment of cataclysm. In the high reaches of the fresco,
- two angels kiss; another plays coyly with an old man's beard.
- Lower on the right, pugnacious angels pound down the damned
- into hell with brute force. The seven angels of the Apocalypse
- trumpet vigorously, blowing out their cheeks and exhibiting
- two books to the figures on the lower levels: an enormous tome
- lists the names of the hell-bound and a small one those who
- merit salvation.
- </p>
- <p> After the fresco is unveiled to critics, art lovers and the
- 7,000 tourists a day who file through the Sistine Chapel, much
- of the credit, or blame, for its new look will be heaped on
- chief restorer Gianluigi Colalucci, 64, who also headed the
- team that cleaned the chapel's ceiling. Says he: "To clean the
- Last Judgment you have to enter into the spirit of the epoch
- in which it was created. You see the work through the eyes of
- the artist, but using modern techniques."
- </p>
- <p> Colalucci and three assistants took a year to study the wall
- and make infrared and ultraviolet photographs to identify possible
- trouble spots. Spectrophotometry images showed restorers where
- Michelangelo had used the secco technique--adding color after
- the plaster had dried--which requires more care in cleaning.
- A dozen cleaning agents were proposed before the restorers settled
- on a solution of distilled water and 25% ammonium carbonate.
- </p>
- <p> There were centuries of accumulated soot and grime to remove.
- The lapis lazuli sky, for example, was originally an intense,
- almost phosphorescent blue, accentuated by reflections from
- the coarsely ground semiprecious stone. But it had been applied
- secco; now, after 400 years, its adhesion is fragile, and the
- crystals in some areas have been irreparably bleached to a dull
- gray by cleaning.
- </p>
- <p> At some occasions in the Sistine Chapel, such as Vatican funerals,
- as many as 100 heavy tallow candles sent ribbons of acrid smoke
- upward, sullying parts of the fresco almost beyond recognition.
- The work has been subjected to other roughshod treatment as
- well. During the installation of a canopy above the altar, iron
- rings were driven into the fresco near the trumpeting angels.
- Workmen's ladders scraped off even more plaster.
- </p>
- <p> Previous cleanings did more harm than good, especially those
- that relied on such dubious detergents as sour Greek wine, used
- by restorers from the 17th century onward. Says Carlo Pietrangeli,
- director-general of the Vatican Museums: "Gluey solutions were
- spread on top of the frescoes to enliven the color. The smoke
- and dust stuck to the glues, and the deposits became stickier
- with each century. In the past they would attempt to clean the
- fresco, then become frightened by the dramatically changed colors
- and be forced to dirty it again." The restorers had a bit of
- undressing to do as well: decency laws passed by the Council
- of Trent in 1564 led to the commissioning of minor artists to
- clothe several of Michelangelo's nude figures. After much debate,
- the Vatican decided to allow most of those additions to be removed.
- </p>
- <p> As Colalucci and his team worked on, heads and shoulders and
- rows of the blessed, obscured for hundreds of years, began to
- emerge through the dissolving murk--ghosts of the 16th century.
- Michelangelo's message of divine retribution fitted the mood
- of the times, perhaps too well. In 1527 Rome had been sacked
- by Emperor Charles V, bringing its Renaissance to an effective
- end. The Catholic Church was attempting to come to terms with
- the challenge posed by the Protestant Reformation. Bickering
- among leading families in what is now Italy, plus the shifting
- sands of papal politics, made the world a most uncertain place.
- Pope Clement VII, who commissioned the Judgment, and his successor
- Paul III wanted Michelangelo's work to shout out a warning that
- the Catholic Church was the path to salvation.
- </p>
- <p> Michelangelo lived 23 years after completing the Judgment, dying
- in 1564 at 89. In his last confession, he lamented, "I regret
- I have not done enough for the salvation of my soul." Those
- who see the restored Last Judgment would have good reason, just
- this once, to dispute the master.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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