Laocoön

Laocoön

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Laocoön and His Sons

Laocoön and His Sons

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The Falling of the Manna

The Falling of the Manna

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Diana and Actaeon

Diana and Actaeon

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Sampler
Sistine Chapel Ceiling: Creation of Adam

Sistine Chapel Ceiling: Creation of Adam

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The Creation of the Sun and the Moon

The Creation of the Sun and the Moon

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Banquet of Alexander

Banquet of Alexander

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Venus and Adonis

Venus and Adonis

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The Flagellation

The Flagellation

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An Allegory with Venus and Cupid

An Allegory with Venus and Cupid

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playlist

Strike a Pose: Serpentine

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Each installment of our Strike a Pose series features one of art history’s most seminal postures. Mediums range from sculpture to oils and everything in between. You can find our article about Serpentine at my.meural.com/editorial/51.

In the winter of 1506, on a Roman vineyard, a sculpture was discovered. It was [Laocoön and His Sons], and it came from Hellenistic Greece, 1500 years in the past. Even before it was fully removed from the earth, Michelangelo was on scene. (The story goes that the Pope, Julius II, asked the architect Giuliano da Sangallo to head to the excavation site; Michelangelo was his friend and a frequent visitor to his house.) Michelangelo was in awe and invigorated—he couldn’t wait to start studying it. It wasn’t like anything he or any of his contemporaries had seen before. Its features were exaggerated, more so than anything in existence, starting with its contorted torso and ending with its anguished face. This was a revelation for the day’s artists; they didn’t even know a body could express such dramatic instability. (It even put to shame the contrapposto pose, which seemed muted in comparison.) This was partly because it was unrealistic and unnatural. In day-to-day life, you’d hardly witness someone in such a pose: legs one way, torso and arms the other, head reared back into view.

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Works

Laocoön

Laocoön

Click to More
Laocoön and His Sons

Laocoön and His Sons

Click to More
The Falling of the Manna

The Falling of the Manna

Click to More
Diana and Actaeon

Diana and Actaeon

Click to More
Sampler
Sistine Chapel Ceiling: Creation of Adam

Sistine Chapel Ceiling: Creation of Adam

Click to More
The Creation of the Sun and the Moon

The Creation of the Sun and the Moon

Click to More
Banquet of Alexander

Banquet of Alexander

Click to More
Venus and Adonis

Venus and Adonis

Click to More
The Flagellation

The Flagellation

Click to More
An Allegory with Venus and Cupid

An Allegory with Venus and Cupid

Click to More