'
An absorbing book, beautifully told and with the writer fully in command of a huge body of research'
Philip Hensher, Mail on Sunday There was an epic sweep to Michelangelo's life.
It is very difficult to cut through the thicket of generations of scholarship and say anything new about David, the Sistine Chapel, The Last Judgement, the Basilica of St Peter's or many of Michelangelo's other masterpieces, but Gayford manages to do so by encouraging us to think - and look - at both the obvious and the overlooked'
Sunday Telegraph '
Only the most ambitious biographer can take on the talent of Michelangelo Buonarroti'
The Times. . . '
It is a measure of [Michelangelo's] magnitude, and Gayford's skill in capturing it, that you finish this book wishing that Michelangelo had lived longer and created more'
Rachel Spence, FT '
One of our most distinguished writers on what makes modern artists tick .
In Michelangelo Martin Gayford describes what it felt like to be Michelangelo Buonarroti, and how he transformed forever our notion of what an artist could be.
Like a hero of classical mythology - such as Hercules, whose statue Michelangelo carved in his youth - he was subject to constant trials and labours.
Few of his works - including the huge frescoes of the Sistine Chapel Ceiling, the marble giant David and The Last Judgment - were small or easy to accomplish.
For decade after decade, he worked near the dynamic centre of events: the vortex at which European history was changing from Renaissance to Counter Reformation.
At 31 he was considered the finest artist in Italy, perhaps the world; long before he died at almost 90 he was widely believed to be the greatest sculptor or painter who had ever lived (and, by his enemies, to be an arrogant, uncouth, swindling miser). '
An absorbing book, beautifully told and with the writer fully in command of a huge body of research'
Philip Hensher, Mail on Sunday There was an epic sweep to Michelangelo's life