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Young Slave
Young Slave
from Wikipedia
Young Slave
Italian: Schiavo giovane
ArtistMichelangelo
Yearcirca 1525–1530
Typesculpture
Mediummarble
Dimensions256 cm (101 in)
LocationGalleria dell'Accademia, Firenze
Preceded byDying Slave
Followed byAtlas Slave
Young Slave at the Galleria dell'Accademia, Florence
Probable bozzetto at the V&A

The Young Slave (Italian: Schiavo giovane) is a marble sculpture of Michelangelo, datable to around 1525–1530 which is conserved in the Galleria dell'Accademia in Florence. It is part of the "unfinished" series of Prigioni intended for the Tomb of Julius II.

History

[edit]

It seems that from the first version of the tomb of Julius II (1505) a series of "Prigioni" was planned for the lowest level of the mausoleum – a series of more-than-life-size statues of chained figures in various poses, leaning on the pilasters which framed a set of niches, each of which would contain a "winged Victory". With one on each side of each niche, it must have been initially intended for there to be sixteen or twenty Prigioni. In the course of the reductions of the project which followed, this was reduced to twelve (second project, 1513), eight (third project, 1516) and finally perhaps a mere four (fourth or fifth version, 1526 or 1532), before they were completely eliminated from the project in 1542. According to de Tolnay (1951, 1954) the Young Slave was intended for the space left of the central niche in the project of 1516.

The first examples of the series are the two Prigioni of Paris, which are mentioned in Michelangelo's letters and were named the "Slaves" (Schiavi) in the 19th century: the Dying Slave and the Rebellious Slave. They were sculpted in Rome around 1513.

The Florentine Prigioni (The Young Slave, the Bearded Slave, the Atlas Slave, and the Awakening Slave) were probably sculpted in the latter half of the 1520s, when Michelangelo was employed at San Lorenzo in Florence (but historians have suggested dates between 1519 and 1534). They are known to have been in the artist's store on the via Mozza until 1544, when Michelangelo's nephew, Leonardo Buonarroti, asked for permission to sell them (Michelangelo did not set foot in Florence after 1534). This permission was denied and it was only in 1564 that they were sold, along with The Genius of Victory to the Grand Duke Cosimo I, who placed them in the four corners of the Grotto of Buontalenti before 1591. They were removed from there in 1908 to join the Michelangelo collection which had been formed in the Florentine gallery.

Regarding the date of their creation, Justi (and others) have proposed 1519 on the basis of a letter of 13 February in which Jacopo Salviati assured the cardinal Aginesis, heir of Pope Julius II that the sculptor would have produced four figures for the tomb before the summer of that year. Wilde proposed 1523, because there is a reference to the cardinal Giulio de' Medici (the future Clement VII) having seen them before he left for Rome on that date. However de Tolnay dated them to 1530–1534, based on stylistic factors, the frequent mentions of unfinished sculptures for the tomb of Pope Julius in Michelangelo's letters of 1531–1532 and because Vasari mentions that they were made while Michelangelo prepared the cartoon of The Last Judgment.

A wax bozzetto of the work at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London is generally considered to have been made by Michelangelo himself.

Description and style

[edit]

The Young Slave has slightly bent knees as if bearing an enormous force bearing down his back. His left arm is raised to cover his face and his right arm is behind his back, held by a chain which is not visible. The figure is among the most complete of the group and shows clear definition in his legs, torso (especially on the left hand side) and his arms. His hands and head are less worked, while the back is completely unsculpted. The whole surface gives clear traces of the chisels and scrapers used in the sculpting process.

Because of its unfinished state it has an extraordinary energy (already noted by Bocchi in 1591), which connects the figure to some kind of primordial act of liberation from its prison of crude stone – an epic battle with chaos. The meaning of the Prigioni was probably linked to the motif of the Captivi in Roman art. In fact, Vasari identifies them as personifications of the provinces controlled by Julius II. For Condivi, however, they symbolised the Arts, turned into "prisoners" after the Pope's death. Other scholars have made suggested philosophical-symbolic meanings or links to the personal life of the artist and his "torments".

Bibliography

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See also

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Young Slave (Italian: Schiavo giovane) is an unfinished by the Buonarroti, created circa 1530–1534 and measuring 256 cm in height. It depicts a youthful male figure in a dynamic pose, with slightly flexed legs supporting the weight on one foot, the left arm raised to partially cover the emerging face, and the right arm bent behind the back and around the hips, while the upper torso partially liberates itself from the rough-hewn block. Commissioned as part of the allegorical slave figures for the grand tomb of Pope Julius II—a project first contracted in 1505 but repeatedly scaled back over decades—this sculpture was among four such "Prisoners" or "Slaves" (alongside the Awakening Slave, Bearded Slave, and Atlas Slave) likely begun under the revised 1516–1534 scheme. The work remained incomplete in Michelangelo's studio after the tomb's final modest realization in San Pietro in Vincoli, Rome, in 1545, reflecting his philosophical conception of sculpture as the act of freeing ideal forms imprisoned within raw stone. Visible chisel marks on the detailed left elbow and biceps highlight his subtractive carving method, progressing from front to back, while the roughed-out head and torsion of the pose evoke the muscular ignudi from the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Following Michelangelo's death in 1564, the sculpture passed to and was incorporated into the Grotta del Buontalenti in the , , where it was positioned to appear as if emerging from rugged masonry, blending art with natural rock. In 1909, it was relocated to the Galleria dell'Accademia, where it now stands in the main corridor leading to the room, alongside its companion slaves, offering insight into Michelangelo's creative process and the evolution of his late Mannerist style.

Background and Commission

Tomb of Pope Julius II

In 1505, Pope Julius II commissioned Michelangelo Buonarroti to design and sculpt a grand mausoleum for his tomb, intended to be a freestanding, three-tiered structure housed in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. The original plan called for approximately 40 to 47 over-life-size marble statues, including a series of "slaves" or captive figures symbolizing either the conquered provinces of the papal states (per Vasari) or the liberal arts vanquished by the pope's death (per Condivi), along with allegorical and biblical elements such as angels, victories, and the central figures of the Virgin and Child. This ambitious project, estimated to cost 10,000 ducats and take five years, reflected Julius II's desire for a monument that would rival ancient imperial tombs and affirm his legacy as a warrior pope. The scope of the tomb underwent repeated reductions through subsequent contracts, driven by financial disputes, competing papal commissions, and negotiations with Julius II's heirs. Following the pope's death in 1513, a revised contract that year scaled the design down to 16-20 figures, shifting it from a freestanding monument to a wall tomb while retaining plans for multiple slaves. By the mid-1520s revisions, including agreements around 1526 and the 1532 contract, the project was further scaled back to around 13 figures, amid ongoing delays caused by political turmoil, including the Sack of Rome in 1527 and Michelangelo's divided attentions between Florence and Rome. The final contract in 1542 eliminated the slave figures entirely, reducing the tomb to a simpler wall structure with just four major statues, including Michelangelo's iconic . Completed in 1545 and relocated to the Church of in , the mausoleum ultimately featured the seated flanked by prophets, , and , but none of the planned slaves, marking a profound contraction from the original vision due to the persistent interplay of papal politics, financial constraints, and Michelangelo's protracted involvement in other Vatican projects.

Michelangelo's Role in the Project

In 1505, commissioned to design and execute a grand monumental , prompting the artist to travel to the quarries where he spent nearly eight months selecting and overseeing the transport of marble blocks for the project. During this initial phase from 1505 to 1506, began creating wax models for the , though actual carving of the slave figures commenced later, after the 1513 revision; the work was further interrupted in 1508 when redirected to paint the , and definitively halted by the pope's death in 1513, leaving the early slaves unfinished. Following Julius II's death, Michelangelo negotiated a new contract on July 6, 1513, with the pope's heirs for a scaled-down wall tomb that included provisions for up to 12 slave figures among other elements like the central Moses statue, reflecting an original vision of allegorical captives representing provinces subdued by the papacy. However, execution was only partial, as the ascension of the Medici pope Leo X in late 1513 introduced conflicts; the Medici family, rivals to Julius's della Rovere lineage, prioritized their own commissions and papal politics, diverting resources and Michelangelo's attention away from the tomb. By 1515, Michelangelo had relocated primarily to Florence under Medici patronage, where he resumed work on the slave figures between approximately 1516 and 1520 as part of ongoing revisions to the tomb project, producing four surviving unfinished examples—including the Young Slave—that were later housed in his studio. These efforts were part of broader reductions in the tomb's scope, from an initial freestanding structure with over 40 figures to a simpler wall monument, allowing Michelangelo to advance the slaves amid his Florentine commitments. Michelangelo's personal frustrations with the project are well-documented in his correspondence with the della Rovere heirs and associates, where he lamented persistent delays in marble delivery from Carrara, financial disputes, and the competing demands of high-profile commissions like the Sistine Chapel ceiling, which he described as a burdensome distraction from his preferred sculptural work on the tomb. In letters spanning 1513 to the 1520s, he expressed exasperation over the heirs' unfulfilled payments and the political machinations that prolonged the endeavor, famously referring to the Julius tomb as "the torment of my life."

Creation Process

Design and Sculpting Technique

employed preliminary wax bozzetti as conceptual models during the design phase for the , allowing him to refine the figure's pose and proportions before committing to . A notable example is the 16.5 cm dark red wax model, attributed to and dated circa 1519, housed in the ; this sketch served as a direct study for the sculpture's emerging form, intended for Pope Julius II's tomb. The sculpture's marble block was sourced from high-quality quarries in the near , , where personally selected material during visits in 1505 and 1516 for the tomb project; these blocks, quarried around 1505–1506 and 1516–1518, were transported laboriously over land and sea to or . Roughing out began with broad chisel work using a and pointed s to extract prominent anatomical features, working freehand from the front toward the back, gradually revealing the figure as if liberating it from the stone's confinement. Within the Prigioni series, the Young Slave, dated around 1530-1534, follows the earlier Dying Slave (Louvre Museum, dated 1513–1516) and the Atlas Slave (c. 1525-1530), with its creation positioned among the four unfinished Accademia figures carved between 1519 and 1534. Art historical dating for the Young Slave varies, with estimates ranging from 1519 (Carl Justi), 1523 (Johannes Wilde), to 1530–1534 (Charles de Tolnay), reflecting stylistic analysis and project timelines. Michelangelo's innovative non-finito technique is evident in the , where the figure appears to struggle against the unhewn , with rough marks transitioning to smoother surfaces on the and limbs, emphasizing the dramatic emergence of form from . This approach, inspired by Vasari's of immersing wax models in water to reveal contours progressively, underscores Michelangelo's philosophy of as the revelation of inherent figures within the block rather than imposition from without.

Reasons for Unfinished State

The ambitious original commission for the in 1505 envisioned a grand freestanding featuring over 40 statues, including numerous allegorical figures such as the Prigioni (or Slaves), to adorn the lower level. However, the project encountered severe setbacks following Julius II's death in 1513, which shifted control to his heirs and prompted immediate contractual revisions that scaled down the design to a simpler wall-mounted structure. Financial disputes exacerbated these changes, as faced chronic payment delays and disputes over expenses, leading to suspensions in work as early as 1506. Further reductions occurred under subsequent popes, including Medici interference during the reigns of Leo X (1513–1521) and Clement VII (1523–1534), who diverted Michelangelo's attention to family projects like the Medici Chapel in , amid broader political turmoil such as the Sack of Rome in 1527. By the final 1545 contract, the tomb was drastically diminished to just seven figures, reflecting years of compromised ambitions and resource constraints. Michelangelo largely abandoned the Prigioni around 1527–1530, redirecting his efforts to the Sistine Chapel's (1536–1541) and expressing reluctance to finish what he viewed as secondary obligations amid ongoing contractual frustrations. While Giorgio Vasari, in his 1550 biography, interpreted the incomplete state as an intentional artistic choice—symbolizing the soul's imprisonment within the body and the artist's liberation of form from marble—the primary causes remain rooted in these practical and historical impediments rather than deliberate aesthetics. Of the original 12 Prigioni planned for the tomb's lower niches, only four survive today: the Young Slave, Awakening Slave, Bearded Slave, and Atlas Slave, with the rest either lost, repurposed, or never fully executed due to the project's repeated curtailments.

Physical Description

Form and Pose

The Young Slave measures 256 cm in height and portrays a nude male figure partially emerging from a block, with the upper more fully realized than the lower sections. The pose employs an exaggerated , with the figure's weight resting primarily on the right leg and slightly flexed knees that convey physical strain. The left arm is raised to partially cover the face, burying it against the bicep, while the right arm bends behind the back, positioned near the hips and implying restraint by an invisible chain. This arrangement generates a pronounced torsion through the muscular , twisting the shoulders off-axis from the hips and legs. The head tilts upward and backward in opposition to the body's curve, featuring a youthful face with tense features just beginning to emerge from the rough stone, complemented by detailed anatomical rendering in the bent , , and left . The strong musculature of the chest and arms highlights Michelangelo's study of human , contrasting with the narrower proportions of the block that constrain the overall form. The back remains largely rough-hewn, marked by visible chisel tracks from large-toothed tools, which accentuates the dramatic front-facing composition and the figure's partial emergence. As one of the Prigioni series, the Young Slave's posture integrates with the group's theme of bound figures, its serpentine twist echoing the dynamic torsion seen in classical sculptures like the group, which influenced Michelangelo's depiction of strained movement.

Material and Dimensions

The Young Slave is carved from a single block of , a material celebrated for its fine grain, translucency, and exceptional durability that enables the subtle modulation of light and shadow across sculpted forms. Michelangelo sourced his marble primarily from the quarries in the near , a region he visited repeatedly to select blocks suited to his vision of figures emerging from the stone. The sculpture measures 256 cm (101 inches) in height, with width and depth varying along its unfinished surfaces due to irregular edges left by the artist's tools. Its surface treatment exemplifies Michelangelo's non-finito technique, featuring polished sections on the face and that highlight anatomical details and create a luminous effect, in stark contrast to the rough, pitted back and limbs marked by visible holes and incisions that preserve the raw energy of the creation process.

Artistic Style and Interpretations

Stylistic Features

The Young Slave serves as a precursor to Mannerism in Michelangelo's oeuvre, featuring exaggerated musculature that conveys immense physical strain and emotional intensity through the figure's contorted, bound form. The 's incomplete surfaces, marked by rough chisel strokes, enhance this dynamism, suggesting an ongoing emergence from the marble block that implies perpetual movement and the soul's entrapment in matter. This non-finito technique, briefly referencing the work's unfinished state from the 1530s commission, underscores Michelangelo's innovative approach to as a process of rather than completion. Michelangelo demonstrates anatomical precision in the Young Slave through meticulous depiction of veins, sinews, and varied skin textures, reflecting his firsthand studies of human dissections conducted in and during the early 1500s. This realism draws heavily from classical antiquities, particularly the , whose fragmented, muscular form inspired the slave's robust, twisting torso and limb articulations. The figure employs the , a serpentine pose that creates rhythmic flow across the bent and straining body, with the head turned inward, shoulders rotated, and limbs coiled in opposition to heighten dramatic tension. Dating to around 1530–1534, the Young Slave illustrates Michelangelo's post-1520 evolution toward more expressive and introspective forms, departing from harmony toward Mannerist complexity and psychological depth.

Symbolic Meanings

The Young Slave, one of Michelangelo's unfinished marble sculptures intended for the tomb of Pope Julius II, has been interpreted through various lenses that emphasize themes of captivity, liberation, and human struggle. Early biographers Giorgio Vasari and Ascanio Condivi proposed that the figures, including the Young Slave, symbolized the liberal arts enslaved by ignorance following the pope's death in 1513, representing the subjugation of intellectual and creative pursuits to mortality. Vasari further suggested in his Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects that the slaves embodied provinces conquered by Julius II, evoking Roman captivi as trophies of papal triumph over earthly realms. Modern scholars have expanded these views into personal and philosophical allegories, seeing the Young Slave as a reflection of Michelangelo's own artistic struggles amid the protracted tomb project, which spanned decades and forced compromises on the artist's vision. The sculpture's incomplete state, known as non-finito, serves as a for the soul's incomplete liberation from material constraints, aligning with Neoplatonic ideas of forms emerging from stone as the spirit strives to transcend the body. This unfinished quality underscores the ongoing battle between idea and execution, where the rough marble clings to the polished , symbolizing the artist's—and humanity's—perpetual tension between potential and realization. The youthful figure of the , with its head buried in the arm and torso twisting in apparent restraint, evokes vulnerability and nascent rebellion against captivity, contrasting sharply with the resigned passivity of the from the same project. This dynamic pose suggests an awakening resistance, possibly linked to Platonic notions of the soul's emergence from primal matter toward ideal forms, where the youth represents unregenerated potential burdened yet striving for freedom. Scholars debate whether the slaves, including the Young Slave, embody specific virtues subdued in the tomb's —such as fortitude or temperance—or function primarily as decorative atlantes supporting the structure's of papal glory, with no fixed iconographic assignment beyond general captivity. These interpretations highlight the sculpture's ambiguity, allowing it to resonate as both a political of and a profound existential .

Provenance and Legacy

Historical Ownership and Movements

Following the abandonment of the tomb project for around 1534, the Young Slave remained unfinished in Michelangelo's Florentine studio, where it was stored at his on via Mozza, including as late as 1544 when his nephew Lionardo Buonarroti sought permission to sell one of the figures (but was refused), and remaining there until after the artist's death in 1564. The sculpture stayed there through the artist's later years in , as documented in correspondence involving his nephew Lionardo Buonarroti. After Michelangelo's death on February 18, 1564, his nephew Lionardo Buonarroti sold the Young Slave, along with the other three unfinished slaves from the Julius tomb project, to . Cosimo acquired them to enrich the ducal collections, initially placing the sculptures in the guardaroba (art storage and display area) of the Palazzo Vecchio, where they served as exemplars for artists and collectors. In 1588, under the direction of , the Young Slave was transferred from the to the Grotta del Buontalenti (also known as the Grotta Grande) in the , adjacent to the Pitti Palace. There, it was displayed among ancient and Mannerist decorations to evoke a sense of emerging forms from rough stone, complementing the grotto's artificial cave aesthetic. The sculpture remained in this location until 1909.

Current Location and Conservation

The Young Slave is currently housed in the Galleria dell'Accademia in , , where it has been displayed since its transfer from the Grotta del Buontalenti in the in 1909, alongside Michelangelo's and the other three unfinished Prisoners to form a centralized collection of the artist's works. Following a major renovation of the museum that began in 2016 and completed in 2023, the sculpture is now exhibited in the Hall of the Prisoners (Sala dei Prigioni), a long corridor designed to highlight the quartet of figures emerging from rough marble blocks. This placement emphasizes their role in the artist's non-finito technique, with the Young Slave positioned to draw visitors toward the room containing . Conservation efforts for the Young Slave have focused on addressing accretions from its earlier outdoor exposure in the and inherent material vulnerabilities of the , with ongoing monitoring for micro-cracks originating from the original quarrying process. The piece remains in stable condition, with regular assessments ensuring its preservation amid environmental controls in the museum. Public access to the Young Slave is managed through the Galleria dell'Accademia's standard visitation, with the sculpture rarely loaned for exhibitions due to its fragility and cultural significance. It was not featured in traveling shows during the 2004-2005 period of Michelangelo-related drawing exhibitions but contributes to the museum's permanent display. As a designated Italian cultural heritage artifact, it is protected under national laws governing the export and handling of state-owned artworks, ensuring its stationary role in Florence. The Young Slave continues to influence scholarly studies on Michelangelo's unfinished sculptures, serving as a key example of the artist's evolving creative process and the intentionality of the non-finito style. It is frequently compared to the finished and in the , completing the surviving set from the Julius II tomb commission and highlighting thematic continuities across the series.

References

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