Tomb of Pope Julius II

The tomb of Julius II, with Michelangelo's statues of Rachel and Leah on the left and the right of his Moses.

The Tomb of Pope Julius II is a sculptural and architectural ensemble by Michelangelo and his assistants, originally commissioned in 1505 but not completed until 1545 on a much reduced scale. Originally intended for St. Peter's Basilica, the tomb was instead placed in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli on the Esquiline in Rome after the pope's death. This church was patronised by the della Rovere family from which Julius came, and he had been titular cardinal there.

As originally conceived, the tomb would have been a colossal structure that would have given Michelangelo the room he needed for his superhuman, tragic beings. This project became one of the great disappointments of Michelangelo's life when the pope, for unexplained reasons, interrupted the commission, possibly because funds had to be diverted for Bramante's rebuilding of St. Peter's.[1] The original project called for a freestanding, three-level structure with some 40 statues. After the pope's death in 1513, the scale of the project was reduced step-by-step until, in April 1532,[2] a final contract specified a simple wall tomb with fewer than one-third of the figures originally planned.[3]

The most famous sculpture associated with the tomb is the figure of Moses, which was completed during one of the sporadic resumptions of the work in 1513. Michelangelo felt that this was his most lifelike creation. Legend has it that upon its completion he struck the right knee commanding, "now speak!" as he felt that life was the only thing left inside the marble. There is a scar on the knee thought to be the mark of Michelangelo's hammer.

History

Study for a wall tomb, c.1506, attributed to Michelangelo. This is the only surviving visual evidence for the project commissioned in 1505, and contradicts Michelangelo's early biographers’ description of a freestanding tomb.
Reconstruction of the original project of 1505 for a freestanding tomb (after Franco Russoli, 1952)[7] 
Reconstruction of the 1513 project, based on a drawing by Jacomo Rocchetti (a pupil of Michelangelo) in the Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin 
Reconstruction of the 1516 project 
Reconstruction of the 1532 project 

Sculptures

The statues of the Dying Slave and the Rebellious Slave were finished but not included in the monument in its last and reduced design.[8] They are now in the Louvre. Another figure intended for Pope Julius' tomb is The Genius of Victory, now in the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence.

  1. ^ Hibbard, Howard. Michelangelo. p. 203. 

Other sculptures for the tomb were the Young Slave, the Atlas Slave, the Bearded Slave and the Awakening Slave. The sculptures of Rachel and Leah, allegories of the contemplative and the active life, were executed by Raffaello da Montelupo, a pupil of Michelangelo. The other sculptures are by less experienced pupils.

Notes

  1. Kleiner, Fred S., Christin J. Mamiya, and Helen Gardner. Gardner's Art Through the Ages. 12th ed. Belmont: Wadsworth, 2004.
  2. Sweetser 1878, p. 92
  3. Sweetser 1878, p. 107
  4. Panofsky 1937, p. 566
  5. "Michelangelo Buonarroti: Project for a Wall Tomb for Pope Julius II (62.93.1)". In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000. (October 2006)
  6. Panofsky 1937, p. 577
  7. Erwin Panofsky (1937) The First Two Projects of Michelangelo's Tomb of Julius II The Art Bulletin 19(4):561–579
  8. See Charles Robertson's article in The Slave in European Art,ed Elizabeth McGrath and Jean Michel Massing, London, The Warburg Institute, 2012

References

Media related to Michelangelo's grave for Julius II at Wikimedia Commons

Panofsky, Erwin (December 1937). "The First Two Projects of Michelangelo's Tomb of Julius II". The Art Bulletin 19 (2): 561–79. doi:10.2307/3045700. JSTOR 3045700. 
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