Skip to main content
Taylor & Francis Group Logo
    Advanced Search

    Click here to search products using title name,author name and keywords.

    • Login
    • Hi, User  
      • Your Account
      • Logout
      Advanced Search

      Click here to search products using title name,author name and keywords.

      Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.

      Book

      Sweetness and Strength
      loading

      Book

      Sweetness and Strength

      DOI link for Sweetness and Strength

      Sweetness and Strength book

      The Reception of Michelangelo in Late Victorian England

      Sweetness and Strength

      DOI link for Sweetness and Strength

      Sweetness and Strength book

      The Reception of Michelangelo in Late Victorian England
      ByLene Østermark-Johansen
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1998
      eBook Published 17 June 2019
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429426247
      Pages 335
      eBook ISBN 9780429426247
      Subjects Arts
      Share
      Share

      Get Citation

      Østermark-Johansen, L. (1998). Sweetness and Strength: The Reception of Michelangelo in Late Victorian England (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429426247

      ABSTRACT

      First published in 1998, this volume explores the reinvention of Michelangelo in the Victorian era. At the opening of the nineteenth century, Michelangelo’s reputation rested on the evidence of contemporary adulation recorded by Vasari and Condivi. Travel, photography, the shift of his drawings into public collections, and, in particular, the publication of his poems in their original form, transformed this situation. The complexity of his work commanded new attention and several biographies were published.

      As public curiosity and knowledge of the artist increased, so various groups began to ally themselves to aspects of Michelangelo’s persona. His Renaissance reputation as a towering genius, a man of great spiritual courage, who had journeyed through and for his art to the depths of despair, was important to the Pre-Raphaelites and other artists. His love for his own ‘Dark Lady’, Vittoria Colonna, aroused excited speculation among High Church advocates, who celebrated his friendship with the deeply religious woman-poet; and the emerging awareness that some half of his love poetry was dedicated to a younger man, Tommaso de’ Cavalieri, was of intense interest to the aestheticists, among them Oscar Wilde, Walter Pater and J.A. Symonds, who sought heroic figures from societies where masculinity was less rigorously defined.

      In this original and beautifully illustrated study, Lene Østermark-Johansen shows how the critical discussion of the artist’s genius and work became irretrievably bound up in contemporary debates about art, religion and gender and how the Romantic view of art and criticism as self-expression turned the focus from the work of art to the artist himself such that the two could never again be viewed in isolation.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter |20 pages

      Eighteenth-century overture: an introduction

      chapter 1|43 pages

      Michelangelo as text

      chapter 2|75 pages

      Michelangelo as line

      chapter 3|50 pages

      Michelangelo as the Petrarchan lover

      chapter 4|67 pages

      Michelangelo as the Platonic lover

      chapter |8 pages

      Conclusion

      T&F logoTaylor & Francis Group logo
      • Policies
        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms & Conditions
        • Cookie Policy
        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms & Conditions
        • Cookie Policy
      • Journals
        • Taylor & Francis Online
        • CogentOA
        • Taylor & Francis Online
        • CogentOA
      • Corporate
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
      • Help & Contact
        • Students/Researchers
        • Librarians/Institutions
        • Students/Researchers
        • Librarians/Institutions
      • Connect with us

      Connect with us

      Registered in England & Wales No. 3099067
      5 Howick Place | London | SW1P 1WG © 2022 Informa UK Limited