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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 | |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 13,244
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![]() We've heard of the 'Da Vinci Code' now there's the 'Michaelangelo Code'.
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#2 |
Go Hawks Go!
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Parkrose
Posts: 2,632
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Cool/interesting
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River Guardian-less |
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#3 |
Kink of Swank
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Satan. Pure Satan.
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#4 |
ohhhh baby
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Did you guys look at the comparison photos they provide? I'm sorry, but it looks like baloney to me. The guy painted tons of things in that ceiling - I'm sure you could find whatever you wanted in all those togas if you wanted to.
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The second star to the right shines in the night for you |
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#5 |
I LIKE!
Join Date: Jan 2005
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My 11 year old daughter, when she was three, painted a picture for me for fathers day which still hangs framed in my office. There are clearly images of a dinosaur (brontosaurus, to be specific), a vacuum, a lazy boy recliner, and an ice cream cone.
Do I believe she meant to paint those things specifically? No. But they look like that to my eye. You can see whatever you want to in art. I'm with CP - looks bogus to me - like a couple of guys looking for grants. |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
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Those pictures are not great, however the Creation of Adam where god is a brain does really look like it. Apparently, Michelangelo worked in a morgue and studied pathology. So it is possible. The examples suck, but what about this:
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#7 |
HI!
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Given what I know about Renaissance art and society, I can believe Michelangelo used his knowledge of anatomy to influence the shapes he was painting on the Sistine Chapel. It is not uncommon for artists from any era to take basic shapes from nature and interpret then as other objects in their art.
What I am skeptical of is the hidden "code". I don't really believe there is any broader or hidden meaning beyond what it is - the influence of other aspects of the artist's life appearing in his artistic work. But, as a trained Art Historian, I have been taught to be skeptical until more research cooberates the initial findings. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
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No, I don't think there's any code leading people to something amazing. I think he just bucked the system and added human anatomy to his art. If I remember correctly, the pope at the time forbid any inner human anatomy to be present in these paintings. No graphic depictions showing body parts, I read this somewhere... Maybe this was just his way of being funny, I don't know. But I do think that's a brain.
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#9 |
Kink of Swank
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I think it's a cabbage, and I could - if I had the time - point out six specific interior cabbage points to prove that the amorphous shape of Mr. God and his angelic sycophants is truly cabbage, and nothing but.
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#10 |
HI!
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And a cabbage would also go along with the theory that the artist used shapes from nature as inspiration in his art. It could well be a cabbage.
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