Description
Book SynopsisTrade Review"Finalist for the Marfield Prize (The National Award for Arts Writing), Arts Club of Washington"
"[An] immaculately researched book. . . . A riveting experience for lovers of any art form. . . . [Wallace] reveals here his masterly skills as a biographer."
---Peter Marks, Washington Post"To this aged Michelangelo, with his frailties, his frustrations, and his insoluble contradictions, William Wallace has devoted the latest and most poignant of his books on the artist. . . . When Michelangelo turned seventy, as he does at the beginning of
Michelangelo, God’s Architect, he had nineteen more years to live, every one of them spent at work. As dear friends died and his body weakened, he took on a remarkable series of huge, daunting projects, fully aware, as Wallace emphasizes, that he would never live to see them completed. In his deeply spiritual vision of the world, his own limits hardly mattered; God had called him, and he had answered. . . . Wallace, in turn, relies on his own experience to take bold risks as a writer, pushing the haphazard evidence that survives from sixteenth-century Rome to bring the city and its people to life."
---Ingrid D. Rowland, New York Review of Books"Wallace brilliantly evokes the day-to-day life of the project as Michelangelo struggled to resolve its many difficulties, which included dealing with the mechanics of the building operation, the calculations of the amount of travertine required, the quarrymen at Tivoli and the practicalities of transport."
---Catherine Fletcher, Literary Review"In
Michelangelo, God’s Architect Wallace presents the artist’s last two decades as the creative climax of a long career whose earlier phases Wallace has explored in previous books. . . . Wallace demonstrates in sympathetic, intimate detail what being an old, famous, phenomenally active artist entailed on a day-to-day basis in Renaissance Rome. . . . Wallace’s Michelangelo is marvellously human. In some ways he remains the same artist I learned about at school. . . . But there’s a more restless, modern consciousness breaking through – like an unfinished figure from the marble – in the way Wallace shows him confronting the fact that even the longest life is too short for completing all that you want to get done."
---Michael Bird, The Telegraph"The strength of Wallace’s work has been to place Michelangelo firmly within his milieu, not as some isolated genius living alone in squalor, but as a human being with strong feelings about friendships and family. . . . He brings the man alive."
---James Stevens Curl, Times Higher Education"[
Michelangelo, God’s Architect] offers a rich, lively, fascinating, biographical examination of the last two decades of Michelangelo’s life. A period when he became the architect of St. Peter’s Basilica and other buildings even as he continued to sculpt and draw . . . [A] superb book!"
---Tyler Green, Modern Art Notes"Including ample illustrations of Michelangelo’s many works of art, this book reveals the active and inimitably creative life of the artist during his final years." * Choice *
"In this well-written, informative book, William Wallace casts light on this often-overlooked period of Michelangelo’s life, revealing his mindset as a man and an artist."
---Adriano Marinazzo, Architectural Histories