< Return to Video

The unheard story of the Sistine Chapel

  • 0:01 - 0:03
    Imagine you're in Rome
  • 0:03 - 0:06
    and you've made your way
    to the Vatican Museums,
  • 0:06 - 0:10
    and you've been shuffling
    down long corridors,
  • 0:10 - 0:14
    past statues, frescoes,
    lots and lots of stuff.
  • 0:14 - 0:17
    You're heading towards the Sistine Chapel.
  • 0:17 - 0:22
    At last, a long corridor,
    a stair, and a door.
  • 0:22 - 0:25
    You're at the threshold
    of the Sistine Chapel.
  • 0:25 - 0:27
    So what are you expecting?
  • 0:27 - 0:30
    Soaring domes? Choirs of angels?
  • 0:30 - 0:32
    We don't really have any of that there.
  • 0:32 - 0:36
    Instead, you may ask yourself,
    what do we have?
  • 0:36 - 0:39
    Well, curtains up on the Sistine Chapel.
  • 0:39 - 0:42
    And I mean literally, you're surrounded
    by painted curtains,
  • 0:42 - 0:44
    the original decoration of this chapel.
  • 0:44 - 0:49
    Churches used tapestries not just
    to keep out cold during long masses,
  • 0:49 - 0:53
    but as a way to represent
    the great theater of life.
  • 0:53 - 0:58
    The human drama in which each one of us
    plays a part is a great story,
  • 0:58 - 1:01
    a story that encompasses the whole world,
  • 1:01 - 1:04
    and that came to unfold
    in the three stages
  • 1:04 - 1:06
    of the painting in the Sistine Chapel.
  • 1:06 - 1:10
    Now, this building started out
    as a space for a small group
  • 1:10 - 1:13
    of wealthy, educated Christian priests.
  • 1:13 - 1:15
    They prayed there.
    They elected their Pope there.
  • 1:15 - 1:20
    Five hundred years ago, it was the ultimate
    ecclesiastical man cave.
  • 1:20 - 1:25
    So, you may ask, how can it be
    that today it attracts and delights
  • 1:25 - 1:28
    five million people a year,
  • 1:28 - 1:30
    from all different backgrounds?
  • 1:30 - 1:35
    Because in that compressed space,
    there was a creative explosion,
  • 1:35 - 1:40
    ignited by the electric excitement
    of new geopolitical frontiers
  • 1:40 - 1:44
    which set on fire the ancient
    missionary tradition of the Church
  • 1:44 - 1:48
    and produced one of the greatest
    works of art in history.
  • 1:48 - 1:53
    Now, this development took place
    as a great evolution,
  • 1:53 - 1:55
    moving from the beginning of a few elite
  • 1:55 - 1:59
    and eventually able to speak
    to audiences of people
  • 1:59 - 2:01
    that come from all over the world.
  • 2:01 - 2:04
    This evolution took place in three stages,
  • 2:04 - 2:07
    each one linked
    to a historical circumstance.
  • 2:07 - 2:09
    The first one was rather limited in scope.
  • 2:09 - 2:12
    It reflected the rather
    parochial perspective.
  • 2:12 - 2:17
    The second one took place after
    worldviews were dramatically altered
  • 2:17 - 2:19
    after Columbus's historical voyage.
  • 2:19 - 2:20
    And the third,
  • 2:20 - 2:24
    when the Age of Discovery
    was well under way
  • 2:24 - 2:28
    and the Church rose to the challenge
    of going global.
  • 2:28 - 2:32
    The original decoration of this church
    reflected a smaller world.
  • 2:32 - 2:34
    There were busy scenes
  • 2:34 - 2:38
    that told the stories of the lives
    of Jesus and Moses,
  • 2:38 - 2:42
    reflecting the development
    of the Jewish and Christian people.
  • 2:42 - 2:44
    The man who commissioned this,
    Pope Sixtus IV,
  • 2:44 - 2:47
    assembled a dream team
    of Florentine art,
  • 2:47 - 2:50
    including men like Sandro Botticelli,
  • 2:50 - 2:54
    and the man who would become
    Michelangelo's future painting teacher,
  • 2:54 - 2:56
    Ghirlandaio.
  • 2:56 - 3:01
    These men, they blanked the walls
    with a frieze of pure color,
  • 3:01 - 3:04
    and in these stories you'll notice
    familiar landscapes,
  • 3:04 - 3:07
    the artists using Roman monuments
    or a Tuscan landscape
  • 3:07 - 3:12
    to render a faraway story,
    something much more familiar,
  • 3:12 - 3:15
    with the addition of images
    of the Pope's friends and family.
  • 3:15 - 3:18
    This was a perfect decoration
    for a smart court
  • 3:18 - 3:20
    limited to the European continent,
  • 3:20 - 3:25
    but in 1492, the New World was discovered,
  • 3:25 - 3:27
    horizons were expanding,
  • 3:27 - 3:33
    and this little 133 x 46 foot microcosm
    had to expand as well.
  • 3:33 - 3:35
    And it did,
  • 3:35 - 3:37
    thanks to a creative genius,
  • 3:37 - 3:40
    a visionary, and an awesome story.
  • 3:40 - 3:43
    Now, the creative genius
    was Michelangelo Buonarroti,
  • 3:43 - 3:47
    33 years old when he was tapped
    to decorate 12,000 square foot of ceiling,
  • 3:47 - 3:49
    and the deck was stacked against him.
  • 3:49 - 3:52
    He had trained in painting,
    but had left to pursue sculpture.
  • 3:52 - 3:56
    There were angry patrons in Florence
    because he had left a stack
  • 3:56 - 3:57
    of incomplete commissions,
  • 3:57 - 4:01
    lured to Rome by the prospect
    of a great sculptural project,
  • 4:01 - 4:03
    and that project had fallen through,
  • 4:03 - 4:07
    and he had been left with a commission
    to paint 12 apostles
  • 4:07 - 4:10
    against a decorative background
    in the Sistine Chapel ceiling
  • 4:10 - 4:13
    which would look like
    every other ceiling in Italy.
  • 4:13 - 4:16
    But genius rose to the challenge.
  • 4:16 - 4:19
    In an age when a man dared
    to sail across the Atlantic Ocean,
  • 4:19 - 4:23
    Michelangelo dared to chart
    new artistic waters.
  • 4:23 - 4:25
    He too would tell a story,
  • 4:25 - 4:29
    no apostles, but a story
    of great beginnings,
  • 4:29 - 4:31
    the story of Genesis.
  • 4:31 - 4:34
    Not really an easy sell,
    stories on a ceiling.
  • 4:34 - 4:39
    How would you be able to read
    a busy scene from 62 feet below?
  • 4:39 - 4:42
    The painting technique that had been
    handed on for 200 years
  • 4:42 - 4:46
    in Florentine studios was not equipped
    for this kind of a narrative.
  • 4:46 - 4:49
    But Michelangelo wasn't really a painter,
  • 4:49 - 4:51
    and so he played to his strengths.
  • 4:51 - 4:54
    Instead of being accustomed
    to filling space with busyness,
  • 4:54 - 4:58
    he took a hammer and chisel
    and hacked away at a piece of marble
  • 4:58 - 5:01
    to reveal the figure within.
  • 5:01 - 5:03
    Michelangelo was an essentialist.
  • 5:03 - 5:08
    He would tell his story
    in massive, dynamic bodies.
  • 5:08 - 5:12
    This plan was embraced
    by the larger-than-life Pope Julius II,
  • 5:12 - 5:16
    a man who was unafraid
    of Michelangelo's brazen genius.
  • 5:16 - 5:19
    He was nephew to Pope Sixtus IV,
    and he had been steeped in art
  • 5:19 - 5:22
    for 30 years, and he knew its power.
  • 5:22 - 5:25
    And history has handed down the moniker
    of the Warrior Pope,
  • 5:25 - 5:29
    but this man's legacy to the Vatican,
    it wasn't fortresses and artillery,
  • 5:29 - 5:30
    it was art.
  • 5:30 - 5:33
    He left us the Raphael Rooms,
    the Sistine Chapel.
  • 5:33 - 5:35
    He left St. Peter's Basilica as well as
  • 5:35 - 5:40
    an extraordinary collection
    of Greco-Roman sculptures,
  • 5:40 - 5:44
    decidedly un-Christian works
    that would become the seedbed
  • 5:44 - 5:49
    of the world's first modern museum,
    the Vatican Museums.
  • 5:49 - 5:50
    Julius was a man
  • 5:50 - 5:54
    who envisioned a Vatican
    that would be eternally relevant
  • 5:54 - 5:56
    through grandeur and through beauty,
  • 5:56 - 5:58
    and he was right:
  • 5:58 - 6:03
    the encounter between these two giants,
    Michelangelo and Julius II,
  • 6:03 - 6:05
    that's what gave us the Sistine Chapel.
  • 6:05 - 6:08
    Michelangelo was so committed
    to this project
  • 6:08 - 6:13
    that he succeeded in getting the job done
    in three and a half years
  • 6:13 - 6:15
    using a skeleton crew
  • 6:15 - 6:17
    and spending most of the time,
    hours on end,
  • 6:17 - 6:22
    reaching up above his head
    to paint the stories on the ceiling.
  • 6:22 - 6:24
    So let's look at this ceiling
  • 6:24 - 6:27
    and see storytelling gone global.
  • 6:27 - 6:31
    No more familiar artistic references
    to the world around you.
  • 6:31 - 6:35
    There's just space
    and structure and energy,
  • 6:35 - 6:40
    and a monumental painted framework
    which opens onto nine panels,
  • 6:40 - 6:44
    more driven by sculptural form
    than painterly color,
  • 6:44 - 6:47
    and we stand in the far end
  • 6:47 - 6:49
    by the entrance, far from the altar
  • 6:49 - 6:52
    and from the gated enclosure
    intended for the clergy,
  • 6:52 - 6:57
    and we peer into the distance
    looking for a beginning.
  • 6:57 - 7:01
    And whether in scientific inquiry
    or in Biblical tradition,
  • 7:01 - 7:05
    we think in terms of a primal spark.
  • 7:05 - 7:08
    Michelangelo gave us an initial energy
    when he gave us
  • 7:08 - 7:10
    the separation of light and dark,
  • 7:10 - 7:13
    a churning figure blurry in the distance
  • 7:13 - 7:15
    compressed into a tight space.
  • 7:15 - 7:18
    The next figure looms larger,
  • 7:18 - 7:21
    and you see a figure hurtling
    from one side to the next.
  • 7:21 - 7:26
    He leaves in his wake
    the sun, the moon, vegetation.
  • 7:26 - 7:30
    Michelangelo didn't focus
    on the stuff that was being created,
  • 7:30 - 7:32
    unlike all the other artists.
  • 7:32 - 7:36
    He focused on the act of Creation.
  • 7:36 - 7:38
    And then the movement stops,
  • 7:38 - 7:42
    like a caesura in poetry,
    and the Creator hovers.
  • 7:42 - 7:43
    So what's He doing?
  • 7:43 - 7:46
    Is he creating land? Is He creating sea?
  • 7:46 - 7:50
    Or is He looking back over His handiwork,
    the Universe and His treasures,
  • 7:50 - 7:54
    just like Michelangelo must have looking
    back over his work in the ceiling
  • 7:54 - 7:59
    and proclaiming, "It is good."
  • 7:59 - 8:01
    So now the scene is set,
  • 8:01 - 8:04
    and you get to the culmination
    of Creation which is Man.
  • 8:04 - 8:08
    Adam leaps to the eye,
    a light figure against a dark background,
  • 8:08 - 8:10
    but looking closer,
  • 8:10 - 8:13
    that leg is pretty languid on the ground,
  • 8:13 - 8:15
    the arm is heavy on the knee.
  • 8:15 - 8:19
    Adam lacks that interior spark
  • 8:19 - 8:21
    that will impel him to greatness.
  • 8:21 - 8:26
    That spark is about to be conferred
    by the Creator in that finger,
  • 8:26 - 8:29
    which is one millimeter
    from the hand of Adam.
  • 8:29 - 8:32
    It puts us at the edge of our seats,
    because we're one moment
  • 8:32 - 8:34
    from that contact,
  • 8:34 - 8:37
    through which that man
    will discover his purpose,
  • 8:37 - 8:40
    leap up and take his place
    at the pinnacle of Creation.
  • 8:40 - 8:43
    And then Michelangelo threw a curveball.
  • 8:43 - 8:46
    Who is in that other arm?
  • 8:46 - 8:48
    Eve, first woman.
  • 8:48 - 8:50
    No, she's not an afterthought.
    She's part of a plan.
  • 8:50 - 8:53
    She's always been in His mind.
  • 8:53 - 8:56
    Look at her, so intimate with God
    that her hand curls
  • 8:56 - 8:57
    around his arm,
  • 8:57 - 9:01
    and for me, an American art historian
  • 9:01 - 9:03
    from the 21st century,
  • 9:03 - 9:06
    this was the moment
    that the painting spoke to me,
  • 9:06 - 9:09
    because I realized that this representation
    of the human drama
  • 9:09 - 9:13
    was always about men
    and women, so much so
  • 9:13 - 9:16
    that the dead center,
    the heart of the ceiling
  • 9:16 - 9:18
    is the creation of Woman, not Adam,
  • 9:18 - 9:22
    and the fact is, and when you see them
    together in the Garden of Eden,
  • 9:22 - 9:24
    they fall together,
  • 9:24 - 9:27
    and together their proud posture
  • 9:27 - 9:29
    turns into folded shame.
  • 9:29 - 9:32
    You art a critical juncture
    now in the ceiling.
  • 9:32 - 9:35
    You are exactly at the point
    where you and I can go
  • 9:35 - 9:36
    no further into the church.
  • 9:36 - 9:39
    The gated enclosure
    keeps us out of the inner sanctum,
  • 9:39 - 9:42
    and we are cast out
    much like Adam and Eve.
  • 9:42 - 9:44
    The remaining scenes in the ceiling,
  • 9:44 - 9:46
    they mirror the crowded chaos
    of the world around us.
  • 9:46 - 9:49
    You have Noah and his Ark and the flood.
  • 9:49 - 9:52
    You have Noah. He's making a sacrifice
    and a covenant with God.
  • 9:52 - 9:54
    Maybe he's the Savior?
  • 9:54 - 9:58
    Oh, but no, Noah is the one
    who grew grapes, invented wine,
  • 9:58 - 10:00
    got drunk, and passed out
    naked in his barn.
  • 10:00 - 10:03
    It is a curious way to design the ceiling,
  • 10:03 - 10:05
    now starting out with God creating life,
  • 10:05 - 10:07
    ending up with some guy
    blind drunk in a barn.
  • 10:07 - 10:10
    And so, compared with Adam,
  • 10:10 - 10:13
    you might think Michelangelo
    is making fun of us.
  • 10:13 - 10:15
    But he's about to dispel the gloom
  • 10:15 - 10:18
    by using those bright colors
    right underneath Noah:
  • 10:18 - 10:22
    emerald, taupe, and scarlet
    on the Prophet Zechariah.
  • 10:22 - 10:25
    Zechariah foresees a light
    coming from the east,
  • 10:25 - 10:28
    and we are turned at this juncture
    to a new destination,
  • 10:28 - 10:32
    with sibyls and prophets
    who will lead us on a parade.
  • 10:32 - 10:36
    You have the heroes and heroines
    who make safe the way,
  • 10:36 - 10:38
    and we follow the mothers and fathers.
  • 10:38 - 10:42
    They are the motors of this great
    human engine, driving it forward.
  • 10:42 - 10:46
    And now we're at the keystone
    of the ceiling,
  • 10:46 - 10:48
    the culmination of the whole thing,
  • 10:48 - 10:51
    with a figure that looks like
    he's about to fall out of his space
  • 10:51 - 10:52
    into our space,
  • 10:52 - 10:53
    encroaching our space.
  • 10:53 - 10:56
    This is the most important juncture.
  • 10:56 - 10:58
    Past meets present.
  • 10:58 - 11:01
    This figure, Jonah, who spent three days
    in the belly of the whale,
  • 11:01 - 11:04
    for the Christians is the symbol
    of the renewal of humanity
  • 11:04 - 11:06
    through Jesus's sacrifice,
    but for the multitudes
  • 11:06 - 11:11
    of visitors to that museum
    from all faiths who visit there every day,
  • 11:11 - 11:14
    he is the moment the distant past
  • 11:14 - 11:18
    encounters and meets immediate reality.
  • 11:18 - 11:23
    All of this brings us to the yawning
    archway of the altar wall,
  • 11:23 - 11:26
    where we see Michelangelo's Last Judgment,
  • 11:26 - 11:29
    painted in 1534 after the world
    had changed again.
  • 11:29 - 11:31
    The Reformation had splintered the Church.
  • 11:31 - 11:34
    The Ottoman Empire had made
    Islam a household word,
  • 11:34 - 11:38
    and Magellan had found a route
    into the Pacific Ocean.
  • 11:38 - 11:42
    How is a 59-year old artist who has never
    been any further than Venice
  • 11:42 - 11:45
    going to speak to this new world?
  • 11:45 - 11:48
    Michelangelo chose to paint destiny,
  • 11:48 - 11:50
    that universal desire,
  • 11:50 - 11:51
    common to all of us,
  • 11:51 - 11:54
    to leave a legacy of excellence.
  • 11:54 - 11:58
    Told in terms of the Christian vision
    of the Last Judgment,
  • 11:58 - 11:59
    the end of the world,
  • 11:59 - 12:02
    Michelangelo gave you
    a series of figures
  • 12:02 - 12:05
    who are wearing these
    strikingly beautiful bodies.
  • 12:05 - 12:08
    They have no more covers,
    no more portraits
  • 12:08 - 12:09
    except for a couple.
  • 12:09 - 12:12
    It's a composition
    only out of bodies,
  • 12:12 - 12:15
    391, no two alike,
  • 12:15 - 12:18
    unique like each
    and every one of us.
  • 12:18 - 12:22
    They start in the lower corner,
    breaking away from the ground,
  • 12:22 - 12:24
    struggling and trying to rise.
  • 12:24 - 12:27
    Those who have risen
    reach back to help others,
  • 12:27 - 12:29
    and in one amazing vignette,
  • 12:29 - 12:32
    you have a black man and a white man
    pulled up together
  • 12:32 - 12:36
    in an incredible vision of human unity
    in this new world.
  • 12:36 - 12:40
    The lion's share of the space
    goes to the winner's circle.
  • 12:40 - 12:44
    There you find men and women
    completely nude like athletes.
  • 12:44 - 12:47
    They are the ones
    who have overcome adversity,
  • 12:47 - 12:50
    and Michelangelo's vision
    of people who combat adversity,
  • 12:50 - 12:52
    overcome obstacles,
  • 12:52 - 12:54
    they're just like athletes.
  • 12:54 - 12:57
    So you have men and women
    flexing and posing
  • 12:57 - 12:59
    in this extraordinary spotlight.
  • 12:59 - 13:02
    Presiding over this assembly is Jesus,
  • 13:02 - 13:04
    first a suffering man on the cross,
  • 13:04 - 13:07
    now a glorious ruler in Heaven.
  • 13:07 - 13:10
    And as Michelangelo
    proved in his painting,
  • 13:10 - 13:12
    hardship, setbacks, and obstacles,
  • 13:12 - 13:16
    they don't limit excellence,
    they forge it.
  • 13:16 - 13:19
    Now, this does lead us
    to one odd thing.
  • 13:19 - 13:21
    This is the Pope's private chapel,
  • 13:21 - 13:24
    and the best way you can describe that
    is indeed a stew of nudes.
  • 13:24 - 13:28
    But Michelangelo was trying to use
    only the best artistic language,
  • 13:28 - 13:30
    the most universal artistic language
    he could think of,
  • 13:30 - 13:32
    that of the human body.
  • 13:32 - 13:38
    And so instead of the way of showing
    virtue such as fortitude or self-mastery,
  • 13:38 - 13:42
    he borrowed from Julius II's
    wonderful collection of sculptures
  • 13:42 - 13:47
    in order to show inner strength
    as external power.
  • 13:47 - 13:51
    Now, one contemporary did write
  • 13:51 - 13:55
    that the chapel was too beautiful
    to not cause controversy,
  • 13:55 - 13:56
    and so it did.
  • 13:56 - 14:00
    Michelangelo soon found
    that thanks to the printing press,
  • 14:00 - 14:03
    complaints about the nudity
    spread all over the place,
  • 14:03 - 14:07
    and soon his masterpiece of human drama
    was labeled pornography,
  • 14:07 - 14:09
    at which point he added
    two more portraits,
  • 14:09 - 14:12
    one of the man who criticized him,
    a papal courtier,
  • 14:12 - 14:16
    and the other one of himself
    as a dried up husk, no athlete,
  • 14:16 - 14:18
    in the hands of a long-suffering martyr.
  • 14:18 - 14:22
    The year he died he saw
    several of these figures covered over,
  • 14:22 - 14:28
    a triumph for trivial distractions
    over his great exhortation to glory.
  • 14:28 - 14:30
    And so now we stand
  • 14:30 - 14:32
    in the here and now.
  • 14:32 - 14:34
    We are caught in that space
  • 14:34 - 14:36
    between beginnings and endings,
  • 14:36 - 14:41
    in the great, huge totality
    of the human experience.
  • 14:41 - 14:45
    The Sistine Chapel forces us
    to look around as if it were a mirror.
  • 14:45 - 14:46
    Who am I in this picture?
  • 14:46 - 14:49
    Am I one of the crowd?
    Am I the drunk guy?
  • 14:49 - 14:50
    Am I the athlete?
  • 14:50 - 14:53
    And as we leave this haven
    of uplifting beauty,
  • 14:53 - 14:56
    we are inspired to ask ourselves
    life's biggest questions.
  • 14:56 - 15:02
    Who am I and what role do I play
    in this great theater of life?
  • 15:02 - 15:03
    Thank you.
  • 15:03 - 15:06
    (Applause)
  • 15:06 - 15:09
    Bruno Giussani: Elizabeth Lev, thank you.
  • 15:09 - 15:13
    Elizabeth, you mentioned
    this whole issue of pornography,
  • 15:13 - 15:18
    too many nudes and too many
    daily life scenes and improper things
  • 15:18 - 15:20
    in the eyes of the time.
  • 15:20 - 15:22
    But actually the story is bigger.
  • 15:22 - 15:25
    It's not just touching up
    and covering up some of the figures.
  • 15:25 - 15:28
    This work of art was almost
    destroyed because of that.
  • 15:28 - 15:32
    Elizabeth Lev: The effect
    of the Last Judgment was enormous.
  • 15:32 - 15:34
    The printing press made sure
    that everybody saw it,
  • 15:34 - 15:37
    and so this wasn't something
    that happened within a couple of weeks.
  • 15:37 - 15:42
    It was something that happened
    over the space of 20 years
  • 15:42 - 15:44
    of editorials and complaints,
  • 15:44 - 15:45
    saying to the Church,
  • 15:45 - 15:48
    "You can't possibly tell us
    how to live our lives.
  • 15:48 - 15:51
    Did you notice you have
    pornography in the Pope's chapel?"
  • 15:51 - 15:54
    And so after complaints and insistence
  • 15:54 - 15:57
    of trying to get this work destroyed,
  • 15:57 - 15:59
    it was finally the year
    that Michelangelo died
  • 15:59 - 16:01
    that the Church finally found
    a compromise,
  • 16:01 - 16:03
    a way to save the painting,
  • 16:03 - 16:06
    and that was in putting up
    these extra 30 covers,
  • 16:06 - 16:09
    and that happens to be
    the origin of fig-leafing.
  • 16:09 - 16:10
    That's where it all came about,
  • 16:10 - 16:13
    and it came about from a church
    that was trying to save a work of art,
  • 16:13 - 16:17
    not indeed deface or destroyed it.
  • 16:17 - 16:20
    BG: This, what you just gave us,
    is not the classic tour
  • 16:20 - 16:23
    that people get today
    when they go to the Sistine Chapel.
  • 16:23 - 16:24
    (Laughter)
  • 16:24 - 16:27
    EL: I don't know, is that an ad?
  • 16:27 - 16:31
    BG: No, no, no, not necessarily,
    it is a statement.
  • 16:31 - 16:36
    It is, the experience of art today
    is encountering problems.
  • 16:36 - 16:38
    Too many people want to see this there,
  • 16:38 - 16:41
    and the result is five million people
    going through that tiny door
  • 16:41 - 16:43
    and experiencing it
    in a completely different way
  • 16:43 - 16:45
    than we just did in the last 15 minutes.
  • 16:45 - 16:48
    EL: Right. I agree. I think it's really nice
    to be able to pause and look,
  • 16:48 - 16:51
    but also realize,
    even when you're in those days,
  • 16:51 - 16:53
    with 20,000 people a day,
  • 16:53 - 16:55
    even those days when you're in there
    with all those other people,
  • 16:55 - 16:58
    look around you and think
    how amazing it is
  • 16:58 - 17:02
    that some painted plaster
    from 500 years ago
  • 17:02 - 17:05
    can still draw all those people
    standing side by side with you
  • 17:05 - 17:07
    looking upwards with their jaws dropped.
  • 17:07 - 17:10
    It's a great statement about how beauty
  • 17:10 - 17:12
    truly can speak to us all
  • 17:12 - 17:15
    through time and through
    geographic space.
  • 17:15 - 17:18
    BG: Liz, grazie.
    EL: Grazie a te.
  • 17:18 - 17:20
    BG: Thank you.
    (Applause)
Title:
The unheard story of the Sistine Chapel
Speaker:
Elizabeth Lev
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:33

English subtitles

Revisions Compare revisions