A touching tribute to the master Michelangelo, this extraordinary 19th-century marble sculpture depicts the young artist carving his first known work, a faun’s head. Florentine sculptor Emilio Zocchi captures this pivotal moment in art history with striking detail that is evident from every angle of this amazing work. From Michelangelo’s determined expression to his intense posture, Zocchi attains a level of realism and quality that, in itself, pays tribute to Michelangelo’s genius.
It is believed that, at the age of 15, Michelangelo entered the famous Garden of the Medici School of San Marco to study sculpture under the famed artist Bertoldo. The school’s founder, Lorenzo de' Medici, was a patron of the arts and was a driving force of the Renaissance. Lorenzo came upon Michelangelo replicating an ancient statue of a faun that graced the gardens. He was impressed by the youth's talent, but commented that the elderly faun would not have such perfect teeth. In response, Michelangelo spontaneously took up his chisel and broke off a single tooth from his statue. According to Giorgio Vasari's biography of the artist, it was from that moment that Lorenzo understood the talent of the young sculptor and invited him to stay in the Palazzo Medici.
The original faun’s head sculpture, created around 1489, has unfortunately been lost to time, but the story of the young Michelangelo's triumph lives on in this exceptional work by Zocchi. A sister sculpture by the sculptor is on display at the Galleria Palatina in the Palazzo Pitti (Florence).
Emilio Zocchi was a student of Italian “Verismo," a movement in realism that celebrated everyday life and showcased in greater detail and depth the occurrences of the natural world. Using this technique, Zocchi eloquently combines a classical portrait with the contemporary subject of the adolescent, crafting a dynamic and realistic sculpture of a classic moment in time.
Well-regarded during his lifetime as a sculptor of realistic genre scenes, Zocchi won a number of important commissions, including an equestrian statue of Victor Emmanuel in Florence. This sculpture of the Young Michelangelo, however, earned him incredible popularity, and remains the work for which he is best remembered.