When I organised the ‘Bronze’ exhibition at the Royal Academy in 2012, it seemed blindingly obvious that Michelangelo had to feature in it. The only niggling problem was that – as any fule kno, to quote the great Nigel Molesworth – there are no bronzes by Michelangelo. That is not to say – in spite of his well-attested love of marble – that he never made bronzes. On the contrary, two are well documented, but his bronze David vanished during the French Revolution (which means that – at least in theory – it might turn up one day), and his bronze effigy of Pope Julius II for Bologna, which was intended to let them know who was boss, was vindictively melted down by the Bolognese once they had regained control of the city, and recast as a cannon.
No doubt there will be the usual scholarly equivalent of a pantomime slanging match (Oh yes he did, Oh no he didn’t), and the lack of any documentation – so far at least – before the 19th century will be held against them, given how much we know about Michelangelo’s career. Be that as it may, as a rule such discoveries either gain perhaps surprisingly swift acceptance from everyone with the exception of a few diehards – as was the case with Michelangelo’s wooden Crucifix for Santo Spirito in Florence, which was discovered as recently as the 1960s, but was known to have existed – or almost equally swiftly fail to convince, and are soon forgotten.
This is neither the place nor the time to pass judgment on the matter, not least since the various contributions to a not insubstantial book presenting the case in favour of Michelangelo’s authorship will need to be digested thoroughly, but it is tempting to surmise that much will hinge on what people make of the connection between the bronzes and a drawing in the Musée Fabre in Montpellier, which is generally agreed to be a copy of a lost early sheet of studies by Michelangelo, and certainly features spidery pen sketches of men on big cats. Whether posterity comes to the conclusion that the bronzes are by big M or not, they are unquestionably works of extraordinary quality.
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