The Entombment (Michelangelo)

Coordinates: 51°30′32″N 0°07′40″W / 51.509009°N 0.127741°W / 51.509009; -0.127741

The Entombment
Artist Michelangelo
Year circa 1500–1501
Type Tempera on panel
Dimensions 162 cm × 150 cm (64 in × 59 in)
Location London, National Gallery

The Entombment is an unfinished painting of the placing of the body of Jesus in the garden tomb, now generally attributed to the Italian Renaissance master Michelangelo Buonarroti and dated to around 1500 or 1501. It is in the National Gallery in London, which purchased the work in 1868 from Robert Macpherson, a Scottish photographer resident in Rome who, according to various conflicting accounts,[1] had acquired the painting there some 20 years before.

The chronological position of this work has been the source of some dispute, although it is generally considered an early work.[2] Some authorities believe that it may have been executed by one of Michelangelo's pupils from a drawing by the master or was a direct imitation of his work.[3]

According to documents discovered in 1981,[4] Michelangelo had been commissioned to paint a panel for the church of Sant'Agostino in Rome, but in the end gave back the sum received. It is probable that this work was the Entombment, which remained unfinished upon Michelangelo's return to Florence.

The centre of the panel portrays Christ being carried up a flight of steps to the sepulchre, which was intended to be painted in the blank area at the top right of the work. The bearded older man behind him is probably Joseph of Arimathea, who gave up his tomb for use as Christ's sepulchre. The long-haired figure on the left is probably Saint John, wearing a long orange-red gown, with one of the Marys (possibly Mary Magdalene) kneeling at his feet.

The identity of the two figures on the right is uncertain. Suggested identities for the elongated inner figure range from Nicodemus to one of the Marys,[5] while the figure on the far right may be Mary Salome. The large unfinished area at the bottom right was intended to be used for the kneeling form of the Virgin Mary.

The floating appearance of some of the figures may be partly explained by the fact that the painting is intended to be viewed from below,[6] and to the fact that it is unfinished. However, the apparent incongruity of the stance of the bearer on the right remains problematical.[7]

Interesting aspects

Many of the unfinished parts of the painting, such as the cloak of the missing Virgin, would have required quantities of the expensive lapis lazuli blue. If this was in short supply, it could be that this would have held up completion of the painting, which may explain why it was unfinished.[8] However, even if this were so, it would not explain why the artist could not have completed the many other parts of the painting that did not require any blue.[9]

There is also an anecdote that Michelangelo received a letter from his father saying that he should abandon whatever he was doing because a great piece of marble had arrived for him. So he did, and turned that marble into David.

Notes

  1. Michael Hirst and Jill Dunkerton, Making and Meaning: the Young Michelangelo, National Gallery Publications, London, 1994 at 131, endnote 11.
  2. Hirst and Dunkerton, op cit at 60.
  3. Sepoltura di Cristo: La tela incompiuta di Michelangel (in Italian)
  4. Michael Hirst, 1981. Michelangelo in Rome: an altar-piece and the'Bacchus', The Burlington Magazine, October 1981:581ff.
  5. Hirst and Dunkerton, op cit at 67.
  6. Andrew Graham-Dixon, “Anatomy of a Genius”, The Independent, 25 October 1994, http://www.andrewgrahamdixon.com/archive/readArticle/891
  7. Hirst and Dunkerton, op cit at 69.
  8. Hirst and Dunkerton, op cit at 70, 123
  9. Philip McCouat, "Michelangelo's disputed Entombment", http://www.artinsociety.com

See also

External links

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