As part of the decorative scheme of the ceiling, above each of the thrones of the sibyls and prophets (except Zechariah and Jonah) are two figures of ignudi, sitting on plinths and bearing garlands of oak leaves and acorns, and of medallions painted to resemble bronze, with episodes drawn from the books of Genesis, Samuel, Kings, and Maccabees. Although it is within the painted architectural structure, their prominent position - contiguous to the nine prophetic visions - means that they cannot be considered as ornamental elements, and suggests that their function is more than the merely heraldic one attributed to them by Vasari. They seem rather to have been conceived as angelic figures in the special acceptation of "intermediary spirits between men and the Godhead" suggested by Charles de Tolnay.
Summary of works by Michelangelo |
All genres |
Sculptures | Paintings | Sistine Chapel | Drawings | Architecture |
Sculptures |
-1501 | 1502- | David | Julius II's Tomb | Medici Tomb | Pietŕs |
Paintings |
Easel paintings | Frescoes in Pauline Chapel |
Sistine Chapel |
Division of the ceiling | Genesis | Prophets | Sibyls | Ignudi |
Spandrels | Lunettes | Triangles | Medallions |
Last Judgment |
Architecture |
until 1530 | after 1530 |