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The Beginning and the End of the universe, the planet, and humanity. Michelangelo s great fresco cycles of the Creation and Last Judgment on the ceiling and altar wall of the Sistine Chapel in Rome address the key issues that have concerned humanity since time immemorial. At the beginning of a new millennium, when there is great philosophical and scientific interest in the creation of the universe, and more concern about the end of the planet than ever before, Michelangelo's Last Judgment takes on a new importance as the artist's view of 'the end'. The fresco of the Last Judgment is not only a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Beginning and the End of the universe, the planet, and humanity. Michelangelo s great fresco cycles of the Creation and Last Judgment on the ceiling and altar wall of the Sistine Chapel in Rome address the key issues that have concerned humanity since time immemorial. At the beginning of a new millennium, when there is great philosophical and scientific interest in the creation of the universe, and more concern about the end of the planet than ever before, Michelangelo's Last Judgment takes on a new importance as the artist's view of 'the end'. The fresco of the Last Judgment is not only a personal artistic vision of the Biblical event, but it embraces a wealth of contemporary thought and ideas. While Michelangelo was certainly imbued with traditional thinking, there is also strong evidence that he expressed ideas in the fresco that reflected immensely innovative thought related to the new cosmology of the sixteenth century, and that he did this with the due knowledge, consent and approval of Pope Clement VII who first commissioned the project in 1533, and his successor Paul III who saw it through to completion in 1541.
Autorenporträt
Dr Valerie Shrimplin was awarded her PhD for her research entitled 'Sun Symbolism and Cosmology in Michelangelo s Last Judgment '. She has subsequently produced a number of academic publications focusing on the influence of astronomy and cosmology on art and architecture, particularly of the Byzantine, medieval and Renaissance periods.