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Dr. Steven Zucker: When we think of the work of Michelangelo,
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we often think of Florence or Rome, but we're looking at an important
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early sculpture by Michelangelo of the Madonna and Child in Bruges, now
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known as the Bruges Madonna. Dr. Beth Harris: Here we are up in
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northern Europe, and the two real economic powerhouses of Europe were down
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in Italy with the Italian city states, but also the towns in Flanders,
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and at one point, Bruges was one of the most, if not the
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most economically prosperous cities in all of Europe, and there were Italian
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merchants and businessmen and bankers who were living here in Bruges.
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Dr. Zucker: And so although we often learn about the Italian Renaissance as
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distinct from the Northern Renaissance, there was lots of interaction. In
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fact, a family of cloth merchants purchased this and had it shipped to
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Bruges. Dr. Harris: We might also be reminded of the Portinari
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Altarpiece, which made the reverse journey from Bruges to Florence and had
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an enormous impact there. Dr. Zucker: This is a magnificent sculpture.
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It was made early in Michelangelo's career around the time that he produced
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his famous Pietà. And it has a finish to the marble that is
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similar to the highly finished quality that we see in that sculpture in
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the Vatican. Dr. Harris: Like that sculpture, this was commissioned
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for a funerary chapel in an important church. We are looking at a
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subject that there are thousands of examples of both in Italy and here in
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northern Europe, the Madonna and Child: the Madonna seated, holding the
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Christ child. Dr. Zucker: Barely holding the Christ child. The
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child almost seems to be slipping off her lap. Dr. Harris: And
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he's landed on this curve of drapery that now supports him.
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In a way, he's between his mother and the future, and he's a
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little bit unstable and she holds his hand as if to steady him.
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Dr. Zucker: Perhaps about to take his very first step, and there's
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not only a sense of veracity in the way that an infant might
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move away from his mother, just tentatively, but there's also important
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symbolic meanings here. Dr. Harris: When we look at an image of
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the Madonna and Child, we are asked to think about Christ's future,
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Mary's future, ultimately the crucifixion. Dr. Zucker: And we can
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see the seriousness of Mary's face as she seems to have a sense
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of foreknowledge of that fate. Dr. Harris: And that movement away
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from his mother can be interpreted as a way of Christ moving forward
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into that future. What we have here is a composition that is more
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or less in the shape of a pyramid where the virgin's body encompasses
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the form of Christ's. Dr. Zucker: Think back to the Medieval Romanesque
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sculptures, so many wooden sculptures that represent a kind of perfect frontality
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with the Christ child seated on the Virgin Mary's lap, her knees are
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together, she is like a throne, what is referred to as the seat
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of wisdom. But there's no symmetry in those medieval sculptures. It has
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been completely discarded here. Mary is only slightly askew. She still retains
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a kind of centrality and a sense of solidity with the exception of
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her knees. But Christ is full of torsion and twisting and turning.
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Michelangelo is in a sense, showing off. He's saying, look what I can
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do with the human body, look at the kind of movement that I
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can instill within the stone. Although the sculpture is in its original
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location and both figures are looking down in a way that is appropriate
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for a funerary chapel, this is where the family was buried,
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the architectural surround is not original. Dr. Harris: And yet
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it's such a privilege to see a work by Michelangelo here in its
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original location.