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Scribbled thoughts reveal Michelangelo was a tortured poet

By Super Admin
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Google Oneindia News

London, Dec 6 (ANI): He was known for his extraordinary achievements in sculpture and painting, but Michelangelo was apparently a tortured poet - a relatively unknown fact to the world.

Now, a new book has revealed that the Renaissance artist used to scribble thoughts that were 'achingly personal expressions of ambition and despair surely meant for nobody's eyes but his own', reports the Telegraph.

Leonard Barkan, a professor of comparative literature at Princeton University, spent five years studying the artist's written words and has produced a book, 'Michelangelo: A Life on Paper', with 200 reproductions of the artist's private papers.

Michelangelo's achievements sometimes obscure the fact that he was also a poet, writing around 300 poems in his lifetime, said Barkan.

One poem, about the pain he feels for a lover, peters out with the word 'dear', as if he could no longer bear to write down his feelings.

To underline the sentiment, he then turned the sheet 90 degrees and drew a sketch of his own hand, with the index finger pointing at 'dear'.

Michelangelo, best known for great works such as the statue of David and the Sistine Chapel ceiling, had also left behind around 600 cartoons and drawings.

The scraps of writing on about a third of the drawings include lines of poetry, memos to his assistants, explanatory notes to some of his greatest works.

In the margin of one drawing he carefully documented the money he had spent on chickens, oxen and his father's funeral.

Next to a drawing of a Madonna and child he wrote a parody of a love poem that began: 'You have a face sweeter than boiled grape juice, and a snail seems to have passed over it'.

On one sheet, he drew a large hand and two human figures, alongside expressions of longing, sadness and regret, including 'Death is the end of a dark prison' and 'Desire engenders desire and then leaves pain'.

Another sheet features a playful drawing of a cherub next to lines from Petrarch in Latin.

Barkan said the juxtaposition of images and words provide an intimate insight into the artist's inner most thoughts, fears and desires. (ANI)

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