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The
Sistine Chapel (Italian: Cappella Sistina) is a chapel in the
Palace of the Vatican, the official residence of the Roman Catholic
Pope in the Vatican City. It was built between 1475 and 1483,
in the time of Pope Sixtus IV, and is one of the most famous
churches of the Western World. The name Sistine is derived from
the Italian sistino meaning of or pertaining to Sixtus IV. The
chapel is rectangular and measures 40.93 meters long by 13.41
meters wide (the dimensions of the Temple of Solomon, as given
in the Old Testament). It is 20.70 meters high and is roofed
by a flattened barrel vault, with small side vaults over the
6 centered windows. The pavement (15th century) is in opus alexandrinum
(see opus). A transenna in marble by Mino da Fiesole, Andrea
Bregno and Giovanni Dalmata divides the chapel into two parts;
the wider one, together with the altar, is reserved for proper
religious ceremonies and other clergy uses, and the smaller
one for the faithful. The passage (cancellata, gateway) was
originally in gilt iron and more central; it was moved toward
the faithful area to grant a wider space for the pope. By the
same artists is the Cantoria, the space for the chorus. During
important ceremonies, side walls are covered with a series of
tapestries (by Raphael) depicting events from the Gospels and
the Acts of the Apostles.
The architectural plans were made by Baccio Pontelli and the
construction work was supervised by Giovannino de Dolci between
1473 and 1484, at the orders of Sixtus IV.
The first mass in the Sistine Chapel was celebrated on August
9, 1483, as a ceremony by which it was consecrated and dedicated
to the Assumption of the virgin Mary. The wall paintings were
executed by premier painters of the Quattrocento: Perugino,
Botticelli, Ghirlandaio, Rosellini, Signorelli and their respective
workshops, which included Pinturicchio, Piero di Cosimo and
Bartolomeo della Gatta. The subjects were historical religious
themes, selected and divided according to the medieval concept
of the partition of the world history into three epochs: before
the Ten Commandments were given to Moses, between Moses and
Christ's birth, and the Christian era thereafter. They underline
the continuity between the Old Covenant and the New Covenant,
or the transition from the Mosaic law to the Christian religion.
The walls were painted over an astonishingly short period of
time, barely eleven months, from July, 1481 to May, 1482. The
painters were each required first to execute a sample fresco;
these were to be officially examined and evaluated in January,
1482. However, it was so evident at such an early stage that
the frescoes would be satisfactory that by October 1481, the
artists were given the commission to execute the remaining ten
stories. The pictorial programme for the chapel was comprised
of a cycle each from the Old and New Testament of scenes from
the lives of Moses and Christ. The narratives began at the altar
wall - the frescoes painted there yielding to Michelangelo's
Last Judgment a mere thirty year later - continued along the
long walls of the chapel, and ended at the entrance wall. A
gallery of papal portraits was painted above these depictions,
and the latter were completed underneath by representations
of painted curtains. The individual scenes from the two cycles
contain typological references to one another. The Old and New
Testament are understood as constituting a whole, with Moses
appearing as the prefiguration of Christ. The typological positioning
of the Moses and Christ cycles has a political dimension going
beyond a mere illustrating of the correspondences between Old
and New Testament. Sixtus IV was employing a precisely conceived
program to illustrate through the entire cycle the legitimacy
of papal authority, running from Moses, via Christ, to Peter,
whose ultimate authority, conferred by Christ, ultimately to
the Pope of present. The portraits of the latter above the narrative
depictions served emphatically to illustrate the ancestral lineage
of their God-given authority. The two most important scenes
from the fresco cycle, Perugino's Christ Giving the Keys to
St. Peter and Botticelli's The Punishment of Korah; both contain
in the background the triumphal arch of Constantine, the first
Christian emperor, who gave the Pope temporal power over the
Roman western world. The triumphal arch alludes to the imperial
grant of papal power of the Pope. Sixtus IV was thereby not
only illustrating his position in a line of succession starting
in the Old Testament and continuing through the New Testament
up to contemporary times, but was simultaneously restating the
view of the papacy as the legitimate successor to the Roman
Empire.
Christ Giving the Keys to St. Peter - This fresco is
located in the fifth compartment in the northern wall. Among
Perugino's frescoes in the Chapel, the Christ Giving the Keys
to St. Peter is stylistically the most instructive. The main
figures are organized in a frieze in two tightly compressed
rows close to the surface of the picture and well below the
horizon. The principal group, showing Christ handing the gold
and silver keys to the kneeling St. Peter, is surrounded by
the other Apostles, including Judas (fifth figure to the left
of Christ), all with halos, together with portraits of contemporaries,
including one said to be a self-portrait (fifth from the right
edge). The flat, open square is divided by coloured stones into
large foreshortened rectangles, although they are not used in
defining the spatial organization. Nor is the relationship between
the figures and the felicitous invention of the porticoed Temple
of Salomon that dominates the picture effectively resolved.
The triumphal arches at the extremities appear as superfluous
antiquarian references, suitable for a Roman audience. Scattered
in the middle distance are two secondary scenes from the life
of Christ, including the Tribute Money on the left and the Stoning
of Christ on the right.
The style of the figures is inspired to Verrocchio. The active
drapery, with its massive complexity, and the figures, particularly
several apostles, including St. John the Evangelist, with beautiful
features, long flowing hair, elegant demeanour, and refinement
recall St Thomas from Verrocchio's bronze group on Orsanmichele.
The poses of the actors fall into a small number of basic attitudes
that are consistently repeated, usually in reverse from one
side to the other, signifying the use of the same cartoon. They
are graceful and elegant figures who tend to stand firmly on
the earth. Their heads are smallish in proportion to the rest
of their bodies, and their features are delicately distilled
with considerable attention to minor detail. The octagonal temple
with its ample porches that dominates the central axis must
have had behind it a project created by an architect, but Perugino's
treatment is like the rendering of a wooden model, painted with
exactitude. The building with its arches serves as a backdrop
in front of which the action unfolds. Perugino has made a significant
contribution in rendering the landscape. The sense of an infinite
world that stretches across the horizon is stronger than in
almost any other work of his contemporaries, and the feathery
trees against the cloud-filled sky with the bluish hills in
the distance represent a solution that later painters would
find instructive, especially Raphael.
Scenes of the Life of Moses - Botticelli painted three
scenes within the short period of eleven months: Scenes from
the Life of Moses, The Temptation of Christ and The Punishment
of Korah. He also painted, with much help from his workshop,
in the niches above the biblical scenes, some portraits of popes
which have been considerably painted over. In all these works
his painting appears relatively weak. The Scenes of the Life
of Moses fresco is opposite The Temptation of Christ also painted
by Botticelli. The two pictures are typologically related in
that both deal with the theme of temptation. Botticelli integrated
seven episodes from the life of the young Moses into the landscape
with considerable skill, by opening up the surface of the picture
with four diagonal rows of figures. As the Moses cycle starts
on the wall behind the altar, the scenes should, unlike the
pictures of the temptations of Christ, be read from right to
left: (1) Moses in a shining yellow garment, angrily strikes
an Egyptian overseer and then (2) flees to the Midianites. There
(3) he disperses a group of shepherds who were preventing the
daughters of Jethro from (4) drawing water at the well. After
(5,6) the divine revelation in the burning bush at the top left,
Moses obeys God's commandment and (7) leads the people of Israel
in a triumphal procession from slavery in Egypt.
The Punishment of Korah - The message of this painting
provides the key to an understanding of the Sistine Chapel as
a whole before Michelangelo's work. The fresco reproduces three
episodes, each of which depicts a rebellion by the Hebrews against
God's appointed leaders, Moses and Aaron, along with the ensuing
divine punishment of the agitators. On the right-hand side,
the revolt of the Jews against Moses is related, the latter
portrayed as an old man with a long white beard, clothed in
a yellow robe and an olive-green cloak. Irritated by the various
trials through which their emigration from Egypt was putting
them, the Jews demanded that Moses be dismissed. They wanted
a new leader, one who would take them back to Egypt, and they
threatened to stone Moses; however, Joshua placed himself protectively
between them and their would-be victim, as depicted in Botticelli's
painting.
The centre of the fresco shows the rebellion, under the leadership
of Korah, of the sons of Aaron and some Levites, who, setting
themselves up in defiance of Aaron's authority as high priest,
also offered up incense. In the background we see Aaron in a
blue robe, swinging his incense censer with an upright posture
and filled with solemn dignity, while his rivals stagger and
fall to the ground with their censers at God's behest. Their
punishment ensues on the left-hand side of the picture, as the
rebels are swallowed up by the earth, which is breaking open
under them. The two innocent sons of Korah, the ringleader of
the rebels, appear floating on a cloud, exempted from the divine
punishment. The principal message of these scenes is made manifest
by the inscription in the central field of the triumphal arch:
"Let no man take the honour to himself except he that is called
by God, as Aaron was." The fresco thus holds a warning that
God's punishment will fall upon those who oppose God's appointed
leaders. This warning also contained a contemporary political
reference through the portrayal of Aaron in the fresco, depicted
wearing the triple-ringed tiara of the Pope and thus characterized
as the papal predecessor. It was a warning to those questioning
the ultimate authority of the Pope over the Church. The papal
claims to leadership were God-given, their origin lay in Christ
giving Peter the keys to the kingdom of heaven and thereby granting
him privacy over the young Church. Perugino painted this crucial
element of the doctrine of papal supremacy immediately opposite
Botticelli's fresco.
The Temptation of Christ - The fresco which Botticelli
began in July, 1481, is the third scene within the Christ cycle
and depicts the Temptation of Christ. Christ's threefold temptation
by the Devil, as described in the Gospel according to Matthew,
can be seen in the background of the picture, with the devil
disguised as a hermit. At top left, up on the mountain, he is
challenging Christ to turn stones into bread; in the centre,
we see the two standing on a temple, with the Devil attempting
to persuade Christ to cast himself down; on the right-hand side,
finally, he is showing the Son of God the splendour of the world's
riches, over which he is offering to make Him master. However,
Christ drives away the Devil, who ultimately reveals his true
devilish form. On the right in the background, three angels
have prepared a table for the celebration of the Eucharist,
a scene which only becomes comprehensible when seen in conjunction
with the event in the foreground of the fresco. The unity of
these two events from the point of view of content is clarified
by the reappearance of Christ with three angels in the middle
ground on the left of the picture, where He is apparently explaining
the incident occurring in the foreground to the heavenly messangers.
We are concerned here with the celebration of a Jewish sacrifice,
conducted daily before the Temple in accordance with ancient
custom. The high priest is receiving the blood-filled sacrificial
bowl, while several people are bringing animals and wood as
offerings. At first sight, the inclusion of this Jewish sacrificial
scene in the Christ cycle would appear extremely puzzling; however,
its explanation may be found in the typological interpretation.
The Jewish sacrifice portrayed here refers to the crucifixion
of Christ, who through His death offered of His flesh and blood
for the redemption of mankind. Christ's sacrifice is reconstructed
in the celebration of the Eucharist, alluded to here by the
gift table prepared by the angels.
Michelangelo's painting
Michelangelo Buonarroti was commissioned by Pope Julius II in
1508 to repaint the ceiling, originally representing golden
stars on a blue sky; the work was completed between 1508 and
1 November 1512. He painted the Last Judgment over the altar,
between 1535 and 1541, being commissioned by Pope Paul III Farnese.
Michelangelo felt that he was a more developed sculptor than
a painter, but he accepted the offer.
The Ceiling - In 1508 Michelangelo was commissioned by
Pope Julius II to paint the vault, or ceiling of the chapel.
It took him until 1512 to complete. To be able to reach the
ceiling, Michelangelo needed a support; the first idea was by
Bramante, who wanted to build for him a special scaffold, suspended
in the air with ropes. But Michelangelo suspected that this
would leave holes in the ceiling once the work was ended, so
he built a scaffold of his own, a flat wooden platform on brackets
built out from holes in the wall, high up near the top of the
windows. He stood on this scaffolding while he painted. The
first layer of plaster began to grow mold because it was too
wet. Michelangelo had to remove it and start again, but he tried
a new mixture, called intonaco, created by one of his assistants,
Jacopo l'Indaco. This one not only resisted mold, but also entered
the Italian building tradition (and is still now in use). Michelangelo
used bright colors, 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. Michelangelo was employed
to paint only 12 figures, the Apostles, but when the work was
finished there were more than 300. His figures showed the creation,
Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden and the Great Flood. The
sketches are a really precious and curious document. Michelangelo
used male models, even for the females, because female models
were more rare and costly than male ones.
The Last Judgement - Last Judgment was an object of a
heavy dispute between Cardinal Carafa and Michelangelo: the
artist was accused of immorality and intolerable obscenity,
having depicted naked figures, with genitals in evidence, inside
the most important church of Christianity, so a censorship campaign
(known as the "Fig-Leaf Campaign") was organized by Carafa and
Monsignor Sernini (Mantua's ambassador) to remove the frescoes.
When the Pope's own Master of Ceremonies, Biagio da Cesena,
said "it was mostly 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," 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. The genitalia in
the fresco were later covered by the artist Daniele da Volterra,
whom history remembers by the derogatory nickname 'the breeches-painter'.
Restoration and controversy
The chapel has been recently restored (1981 through 1994). This
restoration was initially surrounded by a heated controversy
in the art world, some claiming it a success and a breakthrough
revelation, while a few claiming it ruined the masterpiece.
Some conservationists complained about the loss of a brown patina
that had developed over centuries, comprised of candle smoke,
soot, and repeated applications of poor quality varnish. Despite
clear evidence to the contrary, they claim that this layer of
murky material was actually applied by Michelangelo himself
in order to "harmonise" what they called 'ice-cream colors'.
The bright colors reveal Michelangelo to have been a masterful
colorist, and close-ups of the frescos show complex brushwork
that would not be matched, nor even attempted until the Impressionist
movement of the 19th century. Others comment that bright colors
were necessary for the frescos to stand out in the gloom of
the chapel, with its high, narrow windows. Now that the electric
lighting has been removed and the frescos illuminated solely
by the light from the windows, the original colours and effect
have been restored.
Although no substantial evidence has been found proving that
this was Michelangelo's original intention, the argument is
often disregarded.
The election of a new Pope, the conclave takes place in the
Sistine Chapel. In those occasions a chimney is installed in
the roof of the chapel, from where comes out the smoke. If white
smoke comes out: a new Pope has been elected. Black smoke: no
successful election yet. Nowdays, the chapel is carefully searched
for bugs, recorders, cameras, so that the conclave is kept secret.
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