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The
earliest mention of the Battle of the Centaurs
is to be found in a letter written in 1527 by the agent of the Gonzaga
family in Florence, Giovanni Borromeo, to Federico, Marchese of Mantua,
who wanted to get hold of a work by Michelangelo at any price. The
letter refers to a "certain picture of nude figures, in combat,
made of marble, which he has begun at the request of a great lord,
but is not finished. It is one a half ells on each side and so to
see it is a beautiful thing, and there are more than twenty-five heads
and twenty different bodies, and they adopt various attitudes."
The "great lord" was Lorenzo the Magnificient.
As far as printed sources are concerned, the work was recorded for
the first time in Ascanio Condivi's Vita di Michelangelo Buonarroti,
published in Rome in 1553, where we find a testimony to the appreciation
of now elderly Michelangelo for the great work of his youth: "
... I recall hearing him say that, whenever he sees it again, he realizes
how much wrong he has done nature in not following the art o sculpture,
judging by that work, he could have done so much."
It has rightly been observed that the position of Christ the Judge,
the fulcrum for the whole action of the Last Judgment in the Sistine
Chapel, is reminiscent of the central figure in the Battle: yet another
sign that the memory of the masterpiece of his youth was still vivid
for the artist. While Condivi's biography states that the work was
executed for Lorenzo the Magnificient, on a theme suggested by Politian,
in the 1568 edition of the Lives Giorgio Vasari includes the Battle
in his description of the Garden of San Marco, the piece of land owned
by Lorenzo the Magnificient and facing onto Piazza San Marco in Florence,
which was a celebrated training ground for a number of young artists,
including the adolescent Michelangelo. The work has always been in
the Florentine house of the Buonarroti family, which it has never
left right down to the present day. When Michelangelo the Younger
started to set up the Gallery on the second floor of the palace, he
had "a slice of marble" cut off form the back of the relief
in order to place it on one of the shorter walls of this room (1614).
The subject, described by Condivi as "the abduction of Deianeira
and the scuffle of Centaurs" and by Vasari as "the battle
of Hercules with the Centaurs", has provoked a great deal of
debate and the matter is still not completely settled: in fact the
young Michelangelo, while drawing on a theme that had already been
used in the Florentine figurative culture of the last two decades
of the fifteenth century, appears to have been more interested in
conveying an impression of strength and action than in illustrating
a particular episode from mythology. The relief is, as the agent of
the Gonzagas wrote, "begun" but "not finished".
The figures in the foreground are still attached to the background
by pieces of marble that should have been removed. All the figures
still show the marks of the scalpel. As for the upper strip of the
relief, we can only conjecture what Michelangelo intended to represent
there. In all likelihood the Battle was left incomplete by Michelangelo
because of the death of Lorenzo the Magnificient, in the spring of
1492. |
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