Giorgio Vasari

Michelangelo Made This Haunting Pieta For His Own Tomb. Conservators Have Spent Years Painstakingly Restoring It—See Their Process Here


Following a two-year restoration effort, a haunting sculpture Michelangelo made for his own tomb is once more on public display in Italy.

A Pietà carved from a single block of marble, the artwork shows Jesus’s dead body propped up by the Virgin Mary and St. Mary Magdalene, while the pharisee Nicodemus, whose face was modeled after Michelangelo’s own, looms above. Though technically unfinished by the artist, the piece has long held a special allure for its associations with the artist’s death.

Michelangelo chipped away at the altarpiece from 1547 to 1555—he was in his 70s then—before growing frustrated with the material and abandoning it. Giorgio Vasari explained as much in Lives of the Artists, writing that the marble was hard and riddled with fissures. Sparks would fly when the artist’s hammer made contact, the biographer explained.

Through diagnostic inspections, researchers determined that the stone was sourced from a Medici-owned quarry in Seravezza rather than the Tuscan site from which Michelangelo obtained most of his marble. Embedded throughout were pockets of pyrite, which would explain the sparks.  

After foregoing the sculpture, Michelangelo entrusted it to his servant, who in turn passed the piece along to Tiberio Calcagni, a former pupil of the artist’s who continued etching the work. Around 1560, the artwork was purchased by the banker Francesco Bandini. (For this reason, the sculpture is often referred to as the Bandini Pietà.)

Conservators at work on Michelangelo's <i>Pietà</i>. Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Conservators at work on Michelangelo’s Pietà. Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

With funding from the Friends of Florence Foundation, conservation on the 5,900-pound sculpture began in November 2019, marking the first time the piece had undergone a major restoration in almost 470 years. 

Experts went to work on the piece in an open-air lab at the Opera del Duomo Museum, its institutional home for the past four decades. There was a lot to do: Installed for several hundred years in Florence’s cathedral, the Pietà was discolored with layers of dust, protective wax, and ​​stucco used to rejoin broken pieces, while a plaster cast taken of the sculpture in 1882 left it with dry, white patches.

Now, after several pandemic-induced delays, conservation on the Pietà has been completed, and the newly restored sculpture is set to go on view for six months in the same laboratory that brought it back to life, giving viewers a rare, behind the scenes look at how a masterpiece is maintained.

“This is Michelangelo’s most personal work, not only because it includes his own self-portrait and was destined for his tomb, but because it expresses the tormented relationship he had with marble,” Timothy Verdon, director of the Opera del Duomo Museum, told the New York Times.

See more pictures of the Pietà before, during, and after restoration below.

Conservators at work on Michelangelo's <i>Pietà</i>. Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Alena Fialová.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Alena Fialová.

Conservators at work on Michelangelo's <i>Pietà</i>. Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Alena Fialová.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Alena Fialová.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

Courtesy of the Opera del Duomo Museum. Photo: Claudio Giovannini.

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Michelangelo Is a Giant of Art History. But as a Person, He May Have Actually Been Quite Short


As an artist, Michelangelo was a towering figure. As a human though, he may have actually been pretty short. 

For a new study published in the September 2021 issue of the Czech Republic-based journal Anthropologie, researchers at the Forensic Anthropology, Paleopathology, and Bioarchaeology Research Center in Italy examined three pieces of footwear believed to have belonged to the renaissance man: a pair of leather shoes and a single leather slipper, all in the collection of the Casa Buonarroti Museum in Florence. (The second slipper was stolen from the museum in 1873, according to Live Science.)

Measuring the objects, the researchers were able to extrapolate an estimate of the artist’s height, and it’s rather humble: 5 feet 2 inches tall. 

Today that means Michelangelo could ride most roller coasters, but he’d have trouble reaching the cookies on the top shelf. And he certainly isn’t winning any dunk contests.

It’s worth pointing out, of course, that by the standards of his day—the 15th and 16th centuries—Michelangelo’s height would not have been out of the norm. And, according to the article’s authors, forensic anthropologist Elena Varotto and paleopathologist ​​Francesco Galassi, the measurement squares, roughly, with Giorgio Vasari’s own account of the artist in his indispensable series of Renaissance-era biographies The Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (1550).

Vasari describes Michelangelo as being of “middle height, wide across the shoulders, but the rest of his body in good proportion.” He was a “very healthy man, thin and muscular,” Vasari wrote. 

Varotto and Galassi’s speculation is just that, though. Michelangelo’s remains, located at the Basilica of Santa Croce in Florence, have never been exhumed and studied. There’s also the possibility that the three shoes belonged to a relative of Michelangelo’s rather than to the artist himself. 

Nevertheless, it’s satisfying to think that, for many of us, no matter what we’ve accomplished in life, we can say that we are taller than Michelangelo. 

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