The Prague Post - Michelangelo's three 'pietas' united in historic first

EUR -
AED 4.352284
AFN 74.069356
ALL 96.458233
AMD 445.436138
ANG 2.121012
AOA 1086.73727
ARS 1651.43039
AUD 1.673279
AWG 2.134663
AZN 2.00631
BAM 1.955967
BBD 2.382601
BDT 144.581904
BGN 1.952627
BHD 0.446774
BIF 3508.099415
BMD 1.185101
BND 1.494928
BOB 8.193734
BRL 6.188108
BSD 1.183201
BTN 107.238531
BWP 15.613333
BYN 3.371477
BYR 23227.982497
BZD 2.379101
CAD 1.616567
CDF 2672.403066
CHF 0.912887
CLF 0.025998
CLP 1026.557945
CNY 8.187449
CNH 8.162135
COP 4343.988257
CRC 568.948559
CUC 1.185101
CUP 31.40518
CVE 110.274412
CZK 24.276855
DJF 210.697983
DKK 7.470955
DOP 73.016232
DZD 153.750245
EGP 55.580005
ERN 17.776517
ETB 184.044708
FJD 2.595606
FKP 0.869536
GBP 0.873728
GEL 3.164143
GGP 0.869536
GHS 13.00911
GIP 0.869536
GMD 87.101527
GNF 10385.88643
GTQ 9.074736
GYD 247.541128
HKD 9.26198
HNL 31.319673
HRK 7.534043
HTG 155.093237
HUF 377.957174
IDR 19970.198696
ILS 3.67517
IMP 0.869536
INR 107.401628
IQD 1549.932286
IRR 49922.386037
ISK 144.996799
JEP 0.869536
JMD 184.645759
JOD 0.840215
JPY 181.491723
KES 152.629321
KGS 103.637142
KHR 4755.405872
KMF 494.187478
KPW 1066.526538
KRW 1712.518093
KWD 0.363103
KYD 0.986084
KZT 580.739566
LAK 25342.816867
LBP 105932.194603
LKR 366.081245
LRD 220.022365
LSL 18.983816
LTL 3.499296
LVL 0.716856
LYD 7.458637
MAD 10.796567
MDL 20.133471
MGA 5179.442063
MKD 61.624
MMK 2488.743812
MNT 4230.053889
MOP 9.526513
MRU 47.233031
MUR 54.432014
MVR 18.256478
MWK 2051.675109
MXN 20.304334
MYR 4.623868
MZN 75.731602
NAD 18.987821
NGN 1594.221862
NIO 43.543716
NOK 11.297167
NPR 171.617647
NZD 1.9596
OMR 0.455664
PAB 1.183206
PEN 3.960738
PGK 5.082434
PHP 68.510378
PKR 330.87864
PLN 4.218385
PYG 7733.660064
QAR 4.312468
RON 5.095695
RSD 117.371268
RUB 90.48327
RWF 1728.047488
SAR 4.443799
SBD 9.542032
SCR 17.082179
SDG 712.833967
SEK 10.626862
SGD 1.496741
SHP 0.889133
SLE 28.976318
SLL 24850.977749
SOS 675.057616
SRD 44.679445
STD 24529.20105
STN 24.502091
SVC 10.352884
SYP 13106.714902
SZL 18.98162
THB 37.105291
TJS 11.192955
TMT 4.159705
TND 3.417592
TOP 2.85344
TRY 51.837271
TTD 8.023685
TWD 37.201521
TZS 3069.899056
UAH 51.19957
UGX 4182.356962
USD 1.185101
UYU 45.97373
UZS 14424.231101
VES 469.148291
VND 30777.076808
VUV 141.13201
WST 3.205579
XAF 656.01299
XAG 0.016358
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.202795
XCG 2.132382
XDR 0.81587
XOF 656.01299
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.49849
ZAR 18.982423
ZMK 10667.336178
ZMW 21.878252
ZWL 381.602086
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.0800

    23.72

    +0.34%

  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.86

    +0.46%

  • NGG

    0.0200

    92.42

    +0.02%

  • RYCEF

    0.4500

    17.55

    +2.56%

  • RELX

    -0.6100

    30.45

    -2%

  • RIO

    -1.1900

    96.88

    -1.23%

  • GSK

    1.9400

    60.87

    +3.19%

  • BCE

    0.0800

    25.79

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    58.91

    -1%

  • BP

    -0.1000

    37.56

    -0.27%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.22

    -0.15%

  • BCC

    -0.4300

    86.07

    -0.5%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    15.66

    +0.57%

  • AZN

    3.9300

    209.48

    +1.88%

Michelangelo's three 'pietas' united in historic first
Michelangelo's three 'pietas' united in historic first

Michelangelo's three 'pietas' united in historic first

It is admired the world over as an exquisite depiction of maternal grief. But Michelangelo's "Pieta" has overshadowed two other moving sculptures on the same subject by the Renaissance giant.

Text size:

That is why Florence's Opera del Duomo museum in Italy is putting on display together for the first time all three versions of the Virgin Mary mourning over the body of her son Jesus Christ.

The Tuscan museum's original "Bandini" goes on show Thursday alongside casts of the "Pieta" and "Rondanini", which are on loan from the Vatican Museums.

Positioned to face each other in an intimate setting, there are striking contrasts between these variations, which mark different phases in the life of the artist, who died aged 88 in 1564.

The museum's director, Timothy Verdon, said it was a unique opportunity to "observe Michelangelo's intellectual maturation on the theme of the sacred".

The exhibition, which runs until August 1, "highlights the link between life and art in this religious sculptor, who served the popes for most of his career".

- Purity -

The "Pieta" housed at the Vatican -- masterfully executed when Michelangelo was not yet 25 years old -- amazed his contemporaries, who were dazzled by the beauty of this virgin, clothed in billowing drapery.

The artist rejected criticism that his Mary was too youthful, saying purity kept women beautiful.

Mary cradles her 33-year old son, whose serene expression suggests he could almost be sleeping in a nod to the coming resurrection -- the rising of Jesus from the dead in Christian belief.

This sculpture was damaged by a Hungarian hammer-wielding attacker in 1972, and the restored work of art is now protected behind bulletproof glass.

Centuries earlier, Michelangelo himself -- dissatisfied with the "Bandini", his second pieta -- attacked it with a hammer, leaving marks which can still be seen today on Jesus' shoulder and Mary's hand.

This version was done when the then-72-year old artist was suffering from depression. Convinced death was near, Michelangelo took a vow of poverty and placed religion at the centre of his life.

He lent his own features and beard to the character of Nicodemus, who dominates the "Bandini", shielding Jesus, Mary Magdalene and Mary, who here has lost her earlier timeless beauty.

- Evolution of style -

The "Rondanini" is without doubt the most surprising: stunningly modern, this stripped-down sculpture, about two metres high, was begun around 1552, when the artist was nearly 80 years old.

It was found in his home in Rome, where he worked until his death.

Juxtaposing the three works "allows us to measure the evolution of Michelangelo's style over the 50 years that separate the first pieta from the other two, and the even more drastic and striking change between the last two," said Verdon.

The last pieta feels unfinished and far removed from the aesthetic canons of the time, but experts also see it as a message of faith and the importance of looking beyond appearances to the essential.

Gone is the rich drapery, gone are the supporting characters.

Mary and her son, whose faces and bodies are reduced to sketches, are once again represented alone in an extreme simplicity that reinforces the spiritual power of Michelangelo Buonarroti's last work.

O.Ruzicka--TPP