Medici Masterpieces A landmark exhibition showcasing works by Michelangelo and other Florentine Renaissance artists arrives at the Detroit Institute ofArts. CINDY FRENKEL Special to the Jewish News mong the nearly 200 objects on view in the Detroit Institute of Arts' March 16 June 8 special exhibit, "Magnificenza! The Medici, Michelangelo and the Art of Late Renaissance Florence," is Michelangelo's life-sized marble sculpture David-Apollo, on loan from Italy's Museo Nazionale del Bargello in Florence. It is the first time.ever a sculpture by Michelangelo has been on loan to museums in the United States. (The Meet The Medici show originated in the U.S. at the Art Institute of Chicago before its final The Medici (pronounced MED-dih- stop in Detroit; it debuted at the chee), a family of bankers, princes Palazzo Strozzi in Florence.) and patrons of the arts, ruled Florence Although David is a figure from the almost continually from the 1420s to Old Testament, "he's Christianized in 1737, producing cardinals, popes and [a] sense because he's the patron saint even two queens of France. of the city of Florence, a protector fig- With an unmatchable thirst for ure," says Dr. Larry Feinberg, a cura- power, interest in the sciences and tor of European painting at the Art commitment to art, the Medici were Institute of Chicago. closely associated with the finest of "Originally, Michelangelo intended minds — from Michelangelo to the sculpture to be of David reaching Galileo. They had enormous wealth, back with his sling, but he trans- which they used calculatingly. formed the figure into the mythologi- The DIA show focuses on a group cal Greek god Apollo, reaching for an of leaders who expanded their reach arrow in his quiver," Feinberg says. beyond the first generations and With Marco Chiarini, former direc- reigned over not just Florence but Michelangelo Buonarroti: tor of Florence's Pitti Gallery, Feinberg surrounding cities in Tuscany as well. 7Apollo-David," c. 1530; helped organize the exhibit under the From their home base in Florence, marble. Florence, Museo leadership of exhibition project direc- the four Grand Dukes of Tuscany — Nazionale del Bargello. tor Dr. Alan P. Darr, Walter B. Ford II Cosimo I; his son, Francesco I; anoth- Family Curator of European Sculpture er son, Ferdinando I; and Ferdinando and Decorative Arts at the DIA. I's son, Cosimo II — ruled from 1537 to 1631. The exhibition is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, The show also explores Michelangelo's relationship presenting an extraordinary array of masterpieces, to the Medici — first fostered when he was a young including some of the finest art in Europe from the man by Lorenzo de' Medici ("The Magnificent"), best museums in the world. Italy's most brilliant Renaissance prince who ruled . . Top: Agnolo Bronzino: "Portrait of Eleonora of Toledo with her son Giovanni," ca. 1545; oil on panel. The Detroit Institute ofArts; gift of Mrs. Ralph Harman Booth in memory of her husband Ralph Harman Booth. Bottom: Agnolo Bronzino: "Young Man with a Lute," Ca. 1532-34; oil on panel. Florence, Galleria degli Uffizi. 3/14 2003 74 The pieces come from 77 lenders, including such prominent museums as the Uffizi Galleries in Florence; the Collections of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in Windsor, UK;_ and the Musee du Louvre in Paris. In addition to a newly discovered Michelangelo drawing, Design for a Candelabrum, in pristine con- dition, works in the exhibit include paintings by Bronzino and Vasari, drawings by Pontormo and Salviati, fountains, furniture, tapestries and porcelain.