Signor Gotti’s “Vita,” in 1875, was the first to profit to any considerable degree by documentary researches. The conclusions of this book are best known to the English-reading public through Charles Heath Wilson’s “Life and Works of Michelangelo Buonarotti” (1876 and 1881), consisting of compilations from Gotti, to which are added original investigations of the Sistine frescoes, which are very valuable.
More privileged than any of his predecessors was John Addington Symonds, who, by special favor of the Italian government, was allowed to examine the Buonarotti collection in Florence, so long debarred to others. His “Life of Michelangelo Buonarotti” is therefore unique in being, as the sub-title announces, “based on studies in the archives of the Buonarotti family at Florence.” It was published in 1893 in two large, finely illustrated volumes, and is taken as the latest authoritative word on the subject, a word singularly independent of others’ conclusions, and influenced by an artistic and literary nature of rare sensitiveness.
To those who wish briefer notices of Michelangelo’s life and work than any of these full biographies are recommended the chapters on Michelangelo in Kugler’s “Handbook of the Italian Schools,” in Mrs. Jameson’s “Memoirs of the Italian Painters,” in Frank Preston Stearns’s “Midsummer of Italian Art,” in Mrs. Oliphant’s “Makers of Florence,” and in Symonds’s volume on “Fine Arts” in the series “Renaissance in Italy.”
To understand more fully the character of the man Michelangelo, the student should read his sonnets. There is a complete collection translated by J.A. Symonds, while both Wordsworth and Longfellow have translated a few.
The life of Michelangelo has furnished material for two long poems by American writers,—Longfellow’s drama, and the poem by Stuart Sterne. The former, which is annotated, is a well-balanced study of the great artist’s career and ideals.