| Michelangelo: The Last Judgement - A Glorious Restoration |  | Author: Loren Partridge Publisher: Harry N. Abrams Category: Book
Buy New: $76.91 as of 2/11/2012 12:58 EST details
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Seller: citireading Sales Rank: 1,550,603
Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Pages: 206 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.9 Dimensions (in): 12.5 x 9.7 x 1.1
ISBN: 0810981904 EAN: 9780810981904 ASIN: 0810981904
Publication Date: April 1, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Michaelangelo's "The Last Judgement", painted on the rearwall of the Sistine Chapel, is consider by many to be the artist's greatest work. This lavishly-illustrated volume presents the work in its entirety, as well as in close-up detail.
Amazon.com Review The outrage that, two decades ago, greeted the plan to restore Michelangelo's frescoes in the Sistine Chapel seems absurd, now that they're on view in all their glory. The 150 absolutely magnificent color plates in this big, beautiful book are eloquent testimony to the project's utter success. Even two small patches of background sky, the "before" picture, gray and streaked, and the "after" picture, blue and clear, are thrilling. Two photographs are used almost as bookends: One of the huge fresco of the Last Judgment after cleaning, and one taken of the whole wall, from the same perspective, before. It is difficult to describe how different the wall is now. Perhaps chief restorer Gianluigi Colalucci expresses it best when he writes, "Today... it is clear how distorting that dark and irregular veil of discoloration had been. It extinguished the colors and confused the forms as it dampened their impact. It revealed only monumentality, and that false, dark melancholy that had a facile hold on the human soul." Colalucci had been the first to touch Michelangelo's ceiling--with a handkerchief dampened with saliva--and discover a deep yellow beneath the soot of centuries, so it seems fitting that he also has the last word in this book. There are two other essays besides his, one by Loren Partridge, an interpretation of the Last Judgment, and one on the history, technique, and restoration, by the late Fabrizio Mancinelli, of the Papal Museums. --Peggy Moorman
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