Despite the Sistine Chapel, Michelangelo Did Not Consider Himself a Painter

The problem with being a Renaissance man is that your favorite skill may not be as in-demand as your least favorite skill. Michelangelo was uniquely talented in all aspects of art: design, drawing, sculpting, and painting. He considered himself a sculptor foremost, but when the pope commissioned him to paint a fresco on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican, he couldn't refuse (although he tried).  

Michelangelo never liked to paint, preferring to draw instead. He spent several years on his back painting the chapel ceiling and complaining about it. “I am not in the right place – I am not a painter.” But he enjoyed the preparatory work, the overall design and the study sketches he made of the various characters and elements. One of those studies, of a woman's foot, was recently discovered and sold for more than $27 million, which is orders of magnitude above what Michelangelo was paid to paint the entire ceiling. Read more on Michelangelo's artistic inclinations at the Conversation. 

(Image credit: Jörg Bittner Unna


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