Picturing the Passion: ‘Pieta’ by Michelangelo

By Joynel Fernandes –

The term Pietà finds its roots in the Italian word for ‘pity’ and the Latin word for ‘piety’. Heart-rendering, it depicts the Virgin Mary cradling the dead body of her son Jesus in her loving arms. With no reference in the scriptures, the Pieta (1498 – 1499) developed as a devotional image in 13th century Germany where it was regarded as Vesperbild or ‘the evening picture’. Greatly popularised by the Franciscans, it evoked devotion and faith. This piety was further propagated by colonial influence to the other European nations including France and Italy.

The most successful and synonymously remembered depiction of the Pieta is undoubtedly that created by Michelangelo. He was only 24 when the French Cardinal Jean de Bilheres commissioned this statue as his funeral monument. Michelangelo at once set to task. He secured a block of Carrara marble, which he later claimed, was the most ‘perfect’ block of marble that he had ever used, and began to chisel, carefully transforming the stone into flesh.

So sublime and admirable was its execution that Giorgio Vasari in his ‘Lives of Artists’ applauds his work with these words: ‘It is indeed a miracle that a block of stone, formless at the beginning, was brought to such perfection which nature habitually struggles to create in flesh! No other sculptor, not even the most rare artist will all his hardwork, can ever reach this level of design and grace’

The most alluring aspect of the Pieta is the extra-ordinary affiliation that Michelangelo has constructed between the Virgin Mother and her dead Son. Pyramidal is shape, the body of the beautiful Virgin is enlarged. This was suited to carry the physique of a fully grown man, her son into her lap.

The proportions are not symmetrical and natural. Mary would tower in stature over her Son if she stood up. Michelangelo, in all his creative genius, hides this enlargement with exquisite, life – like folds of a full-length drapery. The folds set the sculpture into motion and enhance its alternation of light and shadow. The ruffling pleats also highlight Michelangelo’s excellent virtuosity and his thrill to drill marble pieces into deeply-cut works of art.

What is unique about this sculpture is the illustration of the Virgin Mary. Nay! She is not described as an aged mother but rather as a young and elegant maiden. Michelangelo received quite a few brick-bats for this imagery. But his depiction was coupled by a virtue. His work never compromised on the theology of the time. As a third–order Franciscan, Michelangelo believed in the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception and the Virgin’s incorruptible purity. Countering a critique, he is quoted to have stated: ‘Do you not know that chaste women stay afresh much more than those who are not chaste? How much more in the case of the Virgin, who had never experienced the least lascivious desire that might change her body?’

Interestingly, Mary does not directly touch the body of her son Jesus. Her right arm gently caresses his flesh through a cloth. This signifies the sacredness of His suffering and the divinity of His form.

Take a look at the rendering of the body of Christ. He appears not bloodied and bruised but rather peaceful and resigned. The loss of life is made apparent through the exposed rib cage and the sucked in abdomen. The expression on His face is gentle, in harmony with his joints, his arms, torso and legs, which are realistically articulated with finely wrought veins and pulses. His exposed thorax reveals His vulnerability and innocence.

After two years the statue was complete and Michelangelo was highly pleased by the outcome of his love and labour. The Pieta stirred his heart, recalling to his mind his very own mother who had passed away when he was only five. Such was his intimacy that he often visited the Chapel where it was displayed. On one such visit, he overheard a group of Lombardy tourists praising the statue and acclaiming it to be the work of his contemporary, Gobbo from Milan.

This upset Michelangelo. He found it strange that his work was attributed to someone else. That night he secretly locked himself inside the Church with a little light and chiselled out his name on the band that ran through Mary’s cloak. However, later he regretted his prompt decision as an indication to his pride and vowed to never again leave his mark on any other work of art.

The world-famous Pieta has not only won substantial adulation but also dramatic damage. In May 1972, a mentally disturbed geologist, a Hungarian by birth walked into the Chapel and attacked the sculpture with his hammer shouting, ‘I am Jesus Christ. I have risen from the dead’. The result of the fifteen blows was a disfigured Mary sans her arm and a chunk of her nose. Painstakingly restored, today the statue is housed in a bullet-proof glass and placed at the right of the entrance to St. Peter’s Basilica.

The throbbing soul of the statue is in the relationship that the two figures share. The Virgin is confronted with the reality of the death of her son. Yet the work is not a loud cry of mourning and devastation but rather a serene scene of tranquillity and graceful acceptance. As Mary tilts her head forward towards Christ, His head is thrown back in the helplessness of human death. And yet the Virgin recognises the newness of life.

Look at Mary’s left hand. Exposed, it softly invites us to meditate on the death of her Son. She delicately presents to us the Body of Christ as a path to salvation. What a profound statement of the Renaissance on the essence of the Eucharist, on the essence of Christ whose death was not the end but the beginning of eternal life!

The Archdiocesan Heritage Museum, Mumbai holds the copyrights for this article .


 Joynel Fernandes is the Assistant Director of the Archdiocesan Heritage Museum, Mumbai. She is currently pursuing her Masters in History. Researching on Church History and Church art is her passion. She hopes to make its understanding more approachable to the younger generation.


The museum is open from Tuesday to Sunday between 9am to 5pm. For a guided tour please contact: 022 – 29271557

One comment

  1. Tremendous article – the secrets of The Pieta! Thank you for making the meaning of this Glorious piece of art so well-explained. Laudetur Jesus Christus! He is Risen indeed!

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