Was Michelangelo autistic? Asks the Royal Society of Medicine, UK
Main Category: AutismArticle Date: 26 May 2004 - 0:00 PDT
'Was Michelangelo autistic? Asks the Royal Society of Medicine, UK'
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Michelangelo di Ludovico Buonarroti (1475-1564) was considered to be 'one of the greatest artists of all time.' Dr Muhammad Arshad presents new evidence in the current issue of the Journal of Medical Biography, published by the Royal Society of Medicine Press, suggesting he suffered from Asperger's disorder, or high-functioning autism.
Characteristics of high-functioning autism
Asperger's is similar to autism but sufferers can function better than autistic individuals and have normal intelligence. The disease is characterised by communication problems, difficulties with social skills, repetitive behaviours, a limited range of interests and coordination problems. These symptoms are sometimes accompanied by a talent or skill in a particular area.
Early life
Michelangelo, the second oldest in a family of five boys, did not get along with his family and suffered physical abuse by his fathers and uncles. He was 'erratic' and 'had trouble applying himself to anything', and was very insecure but ambitious. The men in his family 'displayed autistic traits' and 'features of mood disturbances' were common in his entire family.
Evidence of criteria
Impairment of social interaction
Michelangelo was 'aloof, a loner and had few friends.' He found it difficult to maintain relationships. although, the article says, this was perceived at the time as a necessary condition to being able to create works of art. Dr Arshad writes that even when Michelangelo needed help on a project he always 'preferred to work independently' but, when he did hire an assistant, he refused to nurture their own talents and hired those that did not threaten his 'supremacy.'
Michelangelo's failure to attend his brother's funeral underlined 'his inability to show emotion' and he was a boy who was unsure about himself outside his talent as an artist. In 1505, he wrote, 'Anything might happen to shatter my world.'
Control issues and obsessive routines
Michelangelo was obsessed with work and controlling everything in his life - 'family, money, time and much else.' Dr Arshad writes, 'He was a loner, self-absorbed and gave his undivided attention to his masterpieces - a feature of autism.' He was also obsessed with money and nudity and was focussed so much on his work that he toiled eight years over The Last Judgement.
Communication problems
Michelangelo was 'not a great public speaker' and had difficulty holding up his end of a conversation, often walking away in the middle of an exchange. He had a short temper, a sarcastic wit and was 'paranoid at times, narcissistic and schizoid.' The author claims he 'was strange, preoccupied with his own reality and almost always worked alone.'
Was Michelangelo homosexual?
The categorisation of sexual tendencies was not as defined during the Middle Ages and Renaissance in the same way it is today. Speculation about whether Michelangelo's homosexuality rests on his relationship with a young nobleman with which he developed a deep infatuation in 1532. Although a biographer claimed that Michelangelo was 'impotent, a paedophile, or a homosexual and had contracted syphilis,' it was his anxieties about sex that lead to this belief.
For further information, contact:
Michelle Clarke
The Press Office
The Royal Society of Medicine
1, Wimpole Street
London W1G 0AE
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7290 2904
Fax: +44 (0) 20 7290 2992
Email: michelle.clarke@rsm.ac.uk
Royal Society of Medicine, UK
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
The Divine Michelangelo Buonarroti
posted by Mr. Conrad Jalowski on 13 Jul 2010 at 4:30 pmSimply put, Michelangelo Buonarroti was not autistic. The author of this particular article is heavily biased with her profession as a medical doctor. For example, human accomplishments cannot be reduced or simplified to petty labels and categories. This is yet another display of pyschiatric jargon which is merely esoteric nonsense. The so called years of extreme anguish and hard toil during the painting of "The Last Judgement" was an indication of Michelangelo's creative and artistic genius and extreme dedication to his artwork as opposed to a symptom of autism.
On the topic of his sexuality, Michelangelo Buonarroti was a follower of the intellectual, cultural, literary and philosophical movement of Renaissance Neoplatonism as evident through his Neoplatonic viewpoints on art and the creative process in which he viewed true and noble art as the shadow of the divine. In regards to his sexual preferences, Michelangelo's so called homosexuality was an example of Platonic love or a relation that was non-sexual or one that was pure and chaste. In addition, Michelangelo Buonarroti was not limited to one narrow field as a sculptor as he also engaged in fresco painting and he composed numerous poems and sonnets that were infused with Neoplatonic terms on concepts such as love, desire, art, creativity, hope, melancholy, gloom, anguish, etc.
Overall, this article is poorly written as it has diminished the legacy of the great Florentine painter, sculptor, poet and Neoplatonist Michelangelo Buonarroti. This article is yet another work infested with psychiatric jargon and nonsense as well as psychiatric biases.
Michaelangelo great Autist
posted by oddizm on 26 May 2004 at 7:41 amI am not a scholar on Michaelangelo but I have lived a life with an Asperger's brain. 44 years, so far.
I'm basing my opinion mainly on the book, Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling, which extensively quotes Michelangelo's letters to his family members.
The School of Athens by Raphael shows Michelangelo as a brooding loner and intellectual.
He's not concerned with fashion, either, apparently. Many high functioning autistics are best described as asexual, or at least as chaste, if only because it is so difficult to communicate with potential partners in anything like a normal way. Also, his fear of getting a disease from sex is not too different from a common fear of germs among those with Asperger's or HFA.
He was not too concerned with kissing-up to the pope, though he was very concerned about his family's status, wanting his family to return to it's former glory. For me, the kicker would be a document mentioning problems with making eye contact and a description of him stimming...rocking, pacing, flapping his hands...
Could be he did these but they weren't recorded.
Autistics need respect, we have contributed extraordinary things to human kind and we don't give two whits what "you all" think of us.
:-)
oddizm
http://www.planetautism.com/auspin/a2p2.htm
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