The Sistine Chapel
Raphael's
School of Athens
Raphael's
Disputation
Fra
Angelico & the Chapel of Nicholas V
Augustus
of Prima Porta
The
Casina of Pius IV
The
Carriage Museum
back to
Recent Restorations |
The Restoration of the
Century, as it has been called by many, is now complete. The Sistine Chapel shines
forth in all its beauty at the beginning of the third millennium of Christianity. It
is thanks to the generous financial support of the patrons that the great fresco cycles of
the lives of Moses and Christ, as well as the Cantoria and the Transenna, in the Sistine Chapel are restored to
their original splendor. Thanks are also due to those whose talents as art conservators
have made this possible. Their work has been in progress since 1979 and it is only since December of 1999 that the fruit of this intense labor has been
made completely visible.
Often over-looked because of Michelangelo's work in the Sistine
Chapel are the two decorative fresco cycles on the lateral walls of the Sistine Chapel
. Commissioned by Sixtus IV, the same pope who had the Sistine Chapel built, the two
cycles depict events from the lives of Moses and Christ. They underline the
continuity between the Old Covenant and the New Covenant, or the transition from the
Mosaic law to the Christian religion. The frescoes were executed by a team of
painters including Perugino, Sandro Botticelli, Domenico Ghirlandaio, Luca Signorelli and
Cosimo Rosselli, and were assisted by members of their workshops, among whom were
Pinturicchio, Piero di Cosimo, and Bartolomeo della Gatta. The work was begun in
1481 and completed in 1483.
|