Book Report: Michelangelo: His Life and Works by Donatello de Ninno (?)
I grabbed this book because I owned it and because I've gotten into the new good habit of looking at these browseable books while I'm watching a baseball game instead of leafing through a magazine or trying to get into something of my denser, deeper reading between pitches.
This book, apparently dating from the 1960s (it's not dated inside, but Amazon or its users says 1969), so who am I to argue? It looks to be a companion to a museum exhibit or two. It contains a brief (30-40 pages of text?) biographical sketch of Michelangelo and images of his work. It explores his movement in Renaissance Italy and the trends in his work. Interesting stuff, particularly since I was not that familiar with his time period or whatnot.
Coupled with my other recent read of Renaissance Italy (
John Hawkwood: An English Mercenary in Fourteenth-Century Italy), I'm getting more familiar with this pivotal period in history and whatnot. Interesting bonus factoid/intersection: Less than 100 years after Hawkwood was chief of Florentine defenses, Michelangelo took at turn at the walls, literally, as he was the Governor General of fortifications and lent himself to constructing the walls and whatnot.
Interesting, and something one can browse during a televised baseball game. Culture and Cardinals baseball are going to be the hallmarks of my summer.
Books mentioned in this review: