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Eye, Mind, and Hand in Michelangelo's Poetry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Extract
Although Michelangelo was so self-conscious about his poems as to dismiss them as “silly things” and “heavy pastries,” the neo-Platonic pieces provide us with avenues to his most intimate thoughts on art. In his canzoniere one learns that two little-known guideposts alongside his theoretical approach to painting and sculpture are the special interrelations existing between the eye and the hand and between the intellect and the hand. It is with these relationships which he recognized between, first, vision and manual execution and between, second, poetic conceptualizing and manual execution, that these pages will be concerned.
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- Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1954
References
1 Sappho, Oxyrhynchus Papyri, xv, 1922, No. 1787.
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3 Commentarium in Convivium v.xiii.
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6 Note also the notion of grace in the verses of our second paragraph.
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23 Here the admirer becomes the artist speaking, as noted by Valerio Mariani, La Poesia di Michelangelo (Rome, 1941), p. 3.
24 Plotinus, Enneads v.ix.6.
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31 In Giovanni Papini, Vita di Michelangiolo (Milan, 1949), p. 583.
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36 Il primo libro del trattato, p. 87.
37 De Hollanda, p. 234.