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The many meanings of Michelangelo's Statue of David - James Earle

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    When we think of classic works of art,
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    the most common setting we imagine them in is a museum.
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    But what we often forget is that much of this art
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    was not produced with a museum setting in mind.
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    What happens to an artwork
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    when it's taken out of its originally intended context?
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    Take the example of Michelangelo's Statue of David,
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    depicting the boy hero who slew the giant philistine, Goliath,
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    armed with only his courage and his slingshot.
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    When Michelangelo began carving a block of pure white marble
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    to communicate this famous Biblical story,
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    the city of Florence intended to place the finished product
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    atop their grand cathedral.
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    Not only would the 17 foot tall statue
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    be easily visible at this height,
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    but its placement alongside 11 other statues
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    of Old Testament heroes towering over onlookers
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    would have a powerful religious significance,
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    forcing the viewer to stare in awe towards the heavens.
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    But by the time Michelangelo had finished the work, in 1504,
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    the plans for the other statues had fallen through,
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    and the city realized that lifting such a large sculpture to the roof
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    would be more difficult than they had thought.
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    Furthermore, the statue was so detailed and lifelike,
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    down to the bulging veins in David's arm
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    and the determination on his face,
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    that it seemed a shame to hide it so far from the viewer.
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    A council of politicians and artists
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    convened to decide on a new location for the statue.
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    Ultimately voting to place it in front of the Palazzo della Signoria,
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    the town hall and home of the new Republican government.
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    This new location transformed the statue's meaning.
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    The Medici family, who for generations had ruled the city
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    through their control of banking, had recently been exiled,
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    and Florence now saw itself as a free city,
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    threatened on all sides by wealthy and powerful rivals.
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    David, now the symbol of heroic resistance against overwhelming odds,
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    was placed with his intense stare,
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    now a look of stern warning, focused directly towards Rome,
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    the home of Cardinal Giovanni de Medici.
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    Though the statue itself had not been altered,
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    its placement changed nearly every aspect of it
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    from a religious to a political significance.
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    Though a replica of David still appears at the Palazzo,
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    the original statue was moved in 1873
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    to the Galleria dell'Accademia, where it remains today.
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    In the orderly, quiet environment of the museum,
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    alongside numerous half-finished Michelangelo sculptures,
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    overt religious and political interpretations fall away,
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    giving way to detached contemplation of Michelangelo's
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    artistic and technical skill.
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    But even here, the astute viewer may notice
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    that David's head and hand appear disproportionately large,
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    a reminder that they were made to be viewed from below.
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    So, not only does context change the meaning
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    and interpretation of an artwork throughout its history,
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    sometimes it can make that history resurface
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    in the most unexpected ways.
Title:
The many meanings of Michelangelo's Statue of David - James Earle
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:19

English subtitles

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