Michelangelo Buonarotti,
Study for Adam, a
drawing
Italy, about AD 1510-11
Study for the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel
This beautiful red chalk drawing of the male
nude is for the figure of Adam painted on the ceiling of the
Sistine Chapel, Rome. He reclines on his right side, his left arm
resting on his left leg stretches out to receive life from God. At
the lower left is a study for his right
hand.
Michelangelo has
exploited the qualities of the red chalk to create a warmth of tone
as he drew from the life model. He concentrated on the torso and
upper legs of his model whose ideal anatomy is indicated by
shading, especially on the chest and stomach areas. Around the
outside of the whole body he has reinforced the edge with a strong
line. The figure appears to be as much like a sculpture as a
painting, and Michelangelo considered himself primarily a
sculptor.
Michelangelo was
summoned to Rome by Pope Julius II in 1505, spending the years 1508
to 1512 decorating the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in Rome. He
painted the figure of Adam, on the second half of the ceiling,
around 1511. The pose of Adam as painted in the
fresco
is almost unchanged from this working drawing. Michelangelo would
have used a full-size
cartoon
to transfer the final design to the ceiling
itself.
M. Hirst, Michelangelo and his drawings (New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1988)
J. Wilde, Italian drawings in the Depa-2 (London, The British Museum Press, 1953)
J.A. Gere and N. Turner, Drawings by Michelangelo in th, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1975)