Yes, he seems to have been a good Catholic.
And, Michelangelo was an old man when he painted the Sistine Chapel (inside the Vatican). He did so out of love and honor for God and for his Catholic Faith.
Michelangelo was a Roman Catholic. He is best known as a painter, sculptor, and architect from Italy during the 16th century.
Michaelangelo was a catholic , as he lived in Rome Italy the head of the Catholic church.
David was a perfection of the human body. This was a statement of humanism, which strongly opposed the catholic church. It showed that humans are not shameful and sinful like catholic church viewed it.
The Medici Family and Pope Julius II and Pope Leo of the Roman Catholic Church.
That is hard to know today. However, he was known to say he could see the figure inside the marble block struggling to be freed from the stone. Very interesting fact to know, especially when you look at his unfinished work, the 'Slaves'.
Michelangelo was a Roman Catholic. He is best known as a painter, sculptor, and architect from Italy during the 16th century.
He was a devout Catholic
Michaelangelo was a catholic , as he lived in Rome Italy the head of the Catholic church.
In Renaissance Italy, you were either a Roman Catholic or a heretic.
David was a perfection of the human body. This was a statement of humanism, which strongly opposed the catholic church. It showed that humans are not shameful and sinful like catholic church viewed it.
The sculpture was commissioned by the Roman Catholic Church for the Florence Cathedral in 1501.
The leader spreaded it
They were trying to spread Christianty
The Medici Family and Pope Julius II and Pope Leo of the Roman Catholic Church.
Michelangelo was a Catholic. Back then, the church was a major patron of the arts, but the expectation was that the arts would involve religious themes: As a result, Michelangelo's work frequently drew upon Christian beliefs (the Blessed Virgin Mary and her son Jesus) or portrayed Old Testament figures such as David.
Nearly all Catholic Orders were founded to spread Catholic doctrine and dogma around the world. Probably the most famous, and the most widespread was the Jesuit Order, or the Society of Jesus, founded by St. Ignatius in the sixteenth century to spread the Gospel and to combat the protestant heresy.
Michelangelo was a Catholic. Back then, the church was a major patron of the arts, but the expectation was that the arts would involve religious themes: As a result, Michelangelo's work frequently drew upon Christian beliefs (the Blessed Virgin Mary and her son Jesus) or portrayed Old Testament figures such as David.