ART 542

Art and Society in Renaissance Italy: Michelangelo

Carolina Mangone

Back to "Spring 2019" courses

This course examines Italian Renaissance sculpture through works by Michelangelo, the period’s most paradigmatic and polarizing artist. An innovator across many arts, he nonetheless identified as a sculptor alone. Michelangelo’s proclivity for sculpture-especially in marble-invites us to reexamine his sculpture and practice from multiple vantages: its dialogue with antiquity, its challenge to painting’s primacy, its relationship to architecture, its conception of the body, its dialogue with poetry, its materiality, and its reception and reformulation by contemporary artists and theorists alike.

View this course on the Registrar’s website.

<< German Literature in the 17th Century: Luther’s Legacies: Nation, Subjectivity, SexualitySeminar in Medieval History: France in the Twelfth Century >>
Humanities Council Logo
Italian Studies Logo
American Studies Logo
Humanistic Studies Logo
Ancient World Logo
Canadian Studies Logo
ESC Logo
Journalism Logo
Linguistics Logo
Medieval Studies Logo
Renaissance Logo
Film Studies Logo