The Last Judgement on the altar wall.
michelangelo's sistine chapel cieling
The Creation of Adam is part of the massive ceiling of the Sistine Chapel done by Michelangelo. The Sistine Chapel in the Vatican in Rome.
If you mean 'The Expulsion from the Garden of Eden' it is a part of Michelangelo's painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.
The Sistine Chapel is a part of the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican. Originally known as the Cappella Magna, the chapel takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV, who restored it between 1477 and 1480. It is famous for the ceiling painted by Michelangelo.
If you mean the Libyan Sibyl, it is part of his painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. All his works were made during the Renaissance. Except possibly his last work, the unfinished Pietà.
Raphael painted it, but not in the Sistine Chapel, but in anotherr part of the Vatican. Raphael has not painted in the SIstine Chapel.
This scene is part of the large ceiling fresco in the Sistine Chapel. The ceiling was painted in the years 1408-1412.
It is a technique where water soluble paint is applied to water plaster. When it dries, the color becomes a permanent part of the dried surface. Example: Michelangelo Buonarroti's paintings in the Sistine Chapel in Rome, Italy.
the cherubs are part of a larger piece called the Sistine Madonna, painted between 1515 and 1519. The Sistine Madonna has no connection with the Sistine chapel.
The Sistine Chapel and its ceiling painted by Michelangelo is part of the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City.
It has no specific name. The ceiling is a series of scenes from the Old Testament plus a great number of separate figures. Some art historians call it a many-faceted subject, the world in the morning of time. He also painted a wall in the chapel named the 'Last Judgement'.
Sistine Chapel (Italian: Cappella Sistina) is the best-known chapel in the Apostolic Palace, the official residence of the Pope in Vatican City. Its fame rests on its architecture, evocative of Solomon's Temple of the Old Testament, and on its decoration which has been frescoed throughout by the greatest Renaissance artists, including Michelangelo, Raphael, Bernini, and Sandro Botticelli. Under the patronage of Pope Julius II, Michelangelo painted 12,000 square feet (1,100 m2) of the chapel ceiling between 1508 and 1512. He resented the commission, and believed his work only served the Pope's need for grandeur. However, today the ceiling, and especially The Last Judgement, are widely believed to be Michelangelo's crowning achievements in painting.