The many meanings of Michelangelos Statue of David James Earle

When we think of classic works of art,

the most common setting we imagine them in is a museum.

But what we often forget is that much of this art

was not produced with a museum setting in mind.

What happens to an artwork

when it’s taken out of its originally intended context?

Take the example of Michelangelo’s Statue of David,

depicting the boy hero who slew the giant philistine, Goliath,

armed with only his courage and his slingshot.

When Michelangelo began carving a block of pure white marble

to communicate this famous Biblical story,

the city of Florence intended to place the finished product

atop their grand cathedral.

Not only would the 17 foot tall statue

be easily visible at this height,

but its placement alongside 11 other statues

of Old Testament heroes towering over onlookers

would have a powerful religious significance,

forcing the viewer to stare in awe towards the heavens.

But by the time Michelangelo had finished the work, in 1504,

the plans for the other statues had fallen through,

and the city realized that lifting such a large sculpture to the roof

would be more difficult than they had thought.

Furthermore, the statue was so detailed and lifelike,

down to the bulging veins in David’s arm

and the determination on his face,

that it seemed a shame to hide it so far from the viewer.

A council of politicians and artists

convened to decide on a new location for the statue.

Ultimately voting to place it in front of the Palazzo della Signoria,

the town hall and home of the new Republican government.

This new location transformed the statue’s meaning.

The Medici family, who for generations had ruled the city

through their control of banking, had recently been exiled,

and Florence now saw itself as a free city,

threatened on all sides by wealthy and powerful rivals.

David, now the symbol of heroic resistance against overwhelming odds,

was placed with his intense stare,

now a look of stern warning, focused directly towards Rome,

the home of Cardinal Giovanni de Medici.

Though the statue itself had not been altered,

its placement changed nearly every aspect of it

from a religious to a political significance.

Though a replica of David still appears at the Palazzo,

the original statue was moved in 1873

to the Galleria dell’Accademia, where it remains today.

In the orderly, quiet environment of the museum,

alongside numerous half-finished Michelangelo sculptures,

overt religious and political interpretations fall away,

giving way to detached contemplation of Michelangelo’s

artistic and technical skill.

But even here, the astute viewer may notice

that David’s head and hand appear disproportionately large,

a reminder that they were made to be viewed from below.

So, not only does context change the meaning

and interpretation of an artwork throughout its history,

sometimes it can make that history resurface

in the most unexpected ways.

当我们想到经典艺术作品时

,我们想象它们最常见的环境是博物馆。

但我们经常忘记的是,这种艺术的大部分

创作并不是以博物馆为背景。

当一件艺术品

脱离其最初预期的背景时会发生什么?

以米开朗基罗的大卫雕像为例,

描绘了杀死巨人市侩歌利亚的男孩英雄,

他仅凭勇气和弹弓武装。

当米开朗基罗开始雕刻一块纯白色的大理石

来传达这个著名的圣经故事时,

佛罗伦萨市打算将成品放置

在他们宏伟的大教堂顶上。

这座 17 英尺高的雕像不仅

在这个高度上很容易看到,

而且它与其他 11 座

旧约英雄雕像一起高耸于旁观者之上,

将具有强大的宗教意义,

迫使观众敬畏地凝视天空。

但当米开朗基罗在 1504 年完成这项工作时,

其他雕像的计划已经落空

,这座城市意识到将这么大的雕塑举到屋顶上

比他们想象的要困难得多。

此外,这尊雕像是如此的细致和栩栩如生,

从大卫手臂上凸出的青筋

和他脸上的决心,

以至于将它隐藏在如此之远的地方似乎是一种耻辱。

一个由政治家和艺术家组成的

委员会召开会议,决定雕像的新位置。

最终投票将其放置在

市政厅和新共和党政府所在地的领主宫前。

这个新位置改变了雕像的意义。

几代人通过控制银行业来统治这座城市的美第奇家族

最近被流放

,佛罗伦萨现在将自己视为一个自由城市,

四面八方都受到富有而强大的竞争对手的威胁。

大卫,现在是英勇抵抗压倒性困难的象征,

他的目光凝视着他,

现在是严厉的警告,直接盯着

红衣主教乔瓦尼·德·美第奇 (Giovanni de Medici) 的故乡罗马。

虽然雕像本身没有改变,但

它的位置几乎改变了它的各个方面,

从宗教意义到政治意义。

尽管大卫的复制品仍然出现在宫殿中

,但原雕像于 1873 年被

移至艺术学院美术馆,至今仍保留在那里。

在博物馆有序、安静的环境中,

与众多未完成的米开朗基罗雕塑一起,

公开的宗教和政治解释逐渐消失,

让位于对米开朗基罗

艺术和技术技巧的超然思考。

但即使在这里,精明的观众可能会

注意到大卫的头和手显得不成比例地大

,提醒他们是从下面观看的。

因此,语境不仅改变

了一件艺术品在其整个历史中的意义和解释,

有时它还可以使历史

以最意想不到的方式重新出现。