Michelangelo's first painting, created when he was 12 or 13

(openculture.com)

132 points | by bookofjoe 3 hours ago ago

90 comments

  • Nifty3929 an hour ago

    If you just want to see the painting without all the ads: https://cdn8.openculture.com/2026/01/14225354/1920px-Michela...

  • amarant 2 hours ago

    Something about this painting is reminiscent of the way I(and I'm sure many others) would paint my comic-book heroes at around that age, albeit perhaps lacking some of Michelangelo's talents and skills.

    This painting makes me feel like the bible was pretty much a comic book to the adolescent Michelangelo, and I like that thought. He later went on to paint the ceiling of a huge temple dedicated to his equivalent of Charles Xavier.

    I bet that felt pretty cool for him =)

    • phyzix5761 2 hours ago

      He hated painting the Sistine Chapel ceiling because he saw himself primarily as a sculptor. You can read some of the graphic language he used to describe his perspective of having to do it. Also, he was constantly in pain and would go temporarily blind from holding his head in certain positions for hours at a time.

    • mylons 2 hours ago

      my father made reading The Agony and The Ecstasy a requirement to go to Italy when I was a sophomore in high school. It's a thick tome, but a great read if you're a curious kid.

      as the others said Michelangelo hated doing that painting. He's a very tragic, albeit heroic to me, man. I'd recommend that book if you're at all fascinated by him.

    • scandox an hour ago

      St Anthony was alive in the high middle ages. So not a biblical figure. Much closer to the artists own time.

      Edit: as below a more famous and earlier St Anthony was indeed much closer to the time of the gospels

      • smithkl42 an hour ago

        There were two St. Anthony's. The one in this painting is the first St. Anthony. He was celebrated by Athanasius in a widely read biography and was famous for fighting off demons in the Egyptian desert. He lived from ~251-356 AD. (But yes, a post-Biblical figure.)

    • LegitShady 44 minutes ago

      This painting is a masterstudy of Schongauer's engraving "Saint Anthony Tormented by Demons". If you look closely you can see how its a study but not a 1:1 copy, but aside from some color and light all of this "style" was michaelangelo copying Schongauer as he learned.

    • Mouvelie 2 hours ago

      Fun fact ! Michelangelo hated doing the ceiling thing.

      https://www.dutchfinepaintings.com/michelangelos-sistine-cha...

  • Jerry2 an hour ago

    This is just a summary of the the Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Torment_of_Saint_Anthony

  • al_borland 3 hours ago

    Surely this isn’t the first thing he ever painted, but rather the earliest known work that survived?

    • andsoitis 3 hours ago

      Yes probably first known work. The salient point though is that he did this at 12.

      • saberience an hour ago

        How can they possibly know that for sure? It seems massively unlikely. We don't have any really reliable records from that time.

        • zeroonetwothree an hour ago

          It seems like we do know the year it was painted fairly reliably, but we don't know that it was Michelangelo specifically that painted it (the article exudes more confidence that I would give based on the inherent uncertainty of these identifications).

        • furyofantares an hour ago

          What makes it massively unlikely?

          I could believe even quite a bit younger, there are some wildly talented children and it's easy to believe Michaelangelo to have been one.

        • inejge an hour ago

          > It seems massively unlikely.

          Why? There were other talented people who produced masterful works at an early age. From the same time as this there's a Dürer self-portrait, also aged 12-13:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-Portrait_at_the_Age_of_13

          > We don't have any really reliable records from that time.

          Uh, no. There's no documented attribution of that painting to Michelangelo; that doesn't mean that other things weren't reliably recorded.

          • smokel 12 minutes ago

            That is slightly unconvincing. Durer is indeed a similar genius, but the complexity of that drawing is an order of magnitude lower than the painting.

            Source: know how to draw really well.

        • dfxm12 an hour ago

          The article/video only points to this being proven by research done by Giorgio Bonsanti. If you're curious, you'll have to investigate that angle.

          It is frustrating that the article is so coy about the evidence around the premise of the article! But, this website and the youtube video this article is based around both lean more towards pop than investigative.

    • dfxm12 an hour ago

      and also keep in mind, you probably make many sketches before putting brush to canvas...

  • Fh_ 40 minutes ago

    Must be his earliest work we know, not the first painting he did, because this is too good.

    • ninalanyon 28 minutes ago

      Too right! There must have been dozens of works before that one.

    • luxuryballs 9 minutes ago

      yeah it’s more like the earliest one that was worth preserving or considering “a finished piece” however that worked back then, the first shippable code

  • stavros 3 hours ago

    Do they mean that he grabbed a paintbrush one day and painted this out of the blue? Or does "painting" here mean "specifically painted on a canvas" or whatever?

    • zdc1 2 hours ago

      I assume by "painting" they mean something akin to "published work" but it very well could just be his earliest "known work".

    • groundzeros2015 2 hours ago

      No. He was an apprentice to a master which would have shown him tools and techniques.

    • lawn 2 hours ago

      At that time kids spent their lives training under other masters. By this time he's been painting and assisting full time for many years already.

      Still impressive of course, but remember that it's not straightforward to compare how things are today with other time periods.

    • bookofjoe 3 hours ago

      >... it became "the only painting by Michelangelo located anywhere in the Americas, and also just one of four easel paintings attributed to him throughout his entire career," during most of which he disparaged oil painting itself.

      • stavros 2 hours ago

        How does this answer any part of my question?

        • andsoitis 2 hours ago

          This is his first known work. The salient point though is that he did this at 12.

          • stavros 2 hours ago

            Sure, though calling it "first" is misleading. "Earliest known" is the usual term for that.

            • andsoitis 2 hours ago

              Sure. But it is also obvious that you cannot possibly know that he hadn't painted ANYTHING before that.

              All of that misses the forest for the trees, which is he did it at an incredibly young age!

              • anonymous908213 2 hours ago

                It is less obvious than you think. Obvious to you and me, perhaps. But a significant portion of the population genuinely believes that you are born with the talent to just do this like it's nothing, or born with the talent to be a piano prodigy, etc, and as a result never bother to apply themselves, even though with the wealth of educational resources available today anyone[1] could make paintings of this quality if they were to put in the effort to learn. I think that article headlines that reinforce this popular misconception are rather damaging.

                [1] Given the level of pedantry on this site, I suppose I should say "almost anyone", since a small minority of people with severe disabilities may not be able to.

                • dismantlethesun 2 hours ago

                  Cmon, even famous virtuosos still have to go through a period of being children without fine motor control.

                  I won’t argue about the obviousness as that’s a tarpit of comparing each others social circles, but let say it’s reasonable to assuming this wasn’t his first ever brush stroke to touch canvas.

  • apetrovic 32 minutes ago

    I don't want to compare anyone to Michelangelo, but the opening sentence of the aticle is more than flawed. My daughter got some painting classes in that age, and I saw work of some gifted kids. A bit better than "directionless doodles, chaotic comics, and a few unsteady-at-best school projects".

  • herbertl an hour ago

    It's mentioned in the article that this is a (really good!) painted version of The Torment of Saint Anthony, an engraving by Martin Schongauer.

    Michelangelo would go on to find his first patron, a Cardinal named Raffaele Riario, by forging a sculpture and artificially aging it (which, back then, was a conventional practice to demonstrate expertise and skill: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/how-a-forged-sculpture...)

    Dishonesty aside, both stories are reminders that there's a power to doing stuff with your own two hands (not genning it), as well as not to let today's emphasis on originality take away from using imitation/transcription to practice your craft: https://herbertlui.net/in-defense-of-copycats/

  • tummler an hour ago

    If my 12-year-old painted that, I would call a priest for an exorcism.

    • nwatson an hour ago

      His painting is based on a prior work, an engraving by Martin Schongauer ... "The Temptation of St Anthony" ... see here https://www.wikiart.org/en/martin-schongauer/the-temptation-... ...

      So he was re-rendering a religious folk story.

    • hackitup7 an hour ago

      Seriously. Both because of the talent but also because wtf Mikey don't you want to draw a knight in shining armor or a cow or something.

      • lo_zamoyski 26 minutes ago

        I'm willing to bet this was assigned to him as part of his training or something, but I don't know that.

        On the subject of the content, in actual seriousness, this was a pre-modern, pre-secularized age before the traditionally religious was privatized and viewed as some kind of optional quirky fantasy for adults, subject to taste, one as good as the other. So, moral instruction would have been more overt and crisp, and the subject matter prominent in public. The challenges and difficulties of the moral life would have been taught and spoken of more openly.

        I know the OP is joking, but this would be no cause for alarm, as the image is noble in its content. It depicts St. Anthony's triumph over the demonic. It does not glorify the demonic or debase the good.

        In this context, Man's fallen state predisposes him toward sin. He is tempted to do things he should not and knows he should not. Add to that the malice and opportunism of the fallen angels - the demons - who, while on a short divine leash, nonetheless can exploit the weaknesses and evil in men to lead them toward their doom. The image would then be received as quite inspiring, perhaps helping to inspire and concentrate the viewer's own efforts to resist temptation, combat evil, and to progress on his own journey of conquering the self.

  • iambateman 34 minutes ago

    I’m enjoying the thought of seeing this in the state fair art gallery next to the other seventh grade art.

    It’s wild that someone could be that good that young.

  • owlninja 2 hours ago

    What a crazy coincidence... I had not been to the Kimbell art musesum that is only about 20 minutes away from me in many years. We had a family outing this weekend to go see the Torlonia Collection exhibit there and this painting was just sitting there in their permanent collection! I even got to listen to the guided tour group that happened to be at that painting as I was walking by.

    • chicagojoe an hour ago

      The Torlonia collection was recently in Chicago and had some truly stunning pieces. The Ostia relief was tucked away in a corner and I nearly missed it. The traveling exhibition is well worth seeing for anyone remotely interested in ancient history.

    • psbp 2 hours ago

      The Caravaggio was incredible too.

  • racl101 40 minutes ago

    That picture was always freaky to me as a kid.

  • mythical_39 an hour ago

    Wonder if we replace the demons with the various things which today try to capture our attention?

    Or the massive chemical swings we self-induce, and how those might tear at (or help??) our soul?

  • ojciecczas 2 hours ago

    One thing is to invent such a picture, the other is to copy it almost 1:1 and add some touch, which was the case.

  • worldsavior 3 hours ago

    Other than the drawing skill here, it's interesting why a kid thinks about demons attacking god. And why demons look like that for him.

    • mcgannon2007 3 hours ago

      It isn't an original work, but actually a painted version of a famous engraving by Martin Schongauer.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Temptation_of_St_Anthony_(...

      • basch 2 hours ago

        I am by no means an expert art historian but I'm not sure I 100% follow the logic of their conclusion.

        "pentimenti, or correction marks, a common indication that “a painting is not a copy, but an original work created with artistic freedom.”"

        How often are they analyzing copies made by 12 year old. Is a 12 year old more likely to have made errors or drifted from the source during the process of the copy? Could the corrections be attempts to bring the painting closer to its source, because it wasnt close enough?

        • tlb an hour ago

          If you're copying from another painting, you don't paint a figure and then decide to move it a centimeter to the left. But original paintings often have such changes.

      • BeaverGoose 2 hours ago

        The engraving is much better too. Shame we don't appreciate Schongauer as much as Michelangelo.

        • MontyCarloHall an hour ago

          Of course it's much better, Schongauer was ~25 when he did the engraving. Michelangelo was 12 when he copied it. Likewise, it goes without saying that Haydn's symphonies circa 1765 were much better than Mozart's from the same time, since Haydn was ~30 years old and Mozart was ~10 years old.

          The remarkable thing about the early painting/symphonies isn't the absolute quality of the work, it's that they showcase the artists' intrinsic baseline talents, which they would then leverage as their skills improved with maturity to become some of the greatest artists of all time.

        • dointheatl an hour ago

          You know this isn't the only thing Michelangelo painted, right?

      • maxbaines 2 hours ago

        Thankyou

    • gjm11 3 hours ago

      It looks like the figure they're attacking is meant to be St Anthony, rather than God.

      • sejje 2 hours ago

        ... The painting is titled "The Torment of St Anthony," and the article didn't forget to include that detail.

    • razakel 3 hours ago

      As the article says, it's based on Schongauer's The Temptation of St. Anthony. There's even a version by Salvador Dali.

      • agos 2 hours ago

        there's a cool background to Dali's Temptation of St. Anthony.

        In 1946, 11 surrealist painters were asked to submit a painting to be used in a film (Albert Lewin's "The Private Affairs of Bel Ami"). Among the contestants were Max Ernst (who won), Leonora Carrington, Dalì, Stanley Spencer, Dorothea Tanning. Among the judges was Marcel Duchamp. The painting is then shown in color - the only color scene in an otherwise black and white movie.

        I think the reason why they specifically wanted the temptation of Saint Anthony had to do with censorship, but sadly I can't remember the details

      • Oarch 2 hours ago

        There are many versions, it's a popular theme. I saw 4 or 5 together in the Museum of Western Art in Tokyo recently.

    • dabluecaboose 3 hours ago

      At this point in his life, Michaelangelo was probably apprenticed to Ghirlandaio. This wasn't a freeform doodle, but likely something of a homework assignment. It was common for young artists to be given famous works to copy, or common religious scenes to remake.

    • lacunary 3 hours ago

      It's just a reflection of his education. Even today, many children are raised with religious education that includes stories of demons attacking people. Kids love scary stuff; monsters, battle, etc.

    • gwbas1c 3 hours ago

      It makes me wonder what his home environment was like where he could put such detail into a painting. Something like that isn't made in an afternoon or weekend; and it definitely requires parents to provide resources and moral support.

    • Maken 3 hours ago

      Demons look like that in Medieval and Renaissance paintings. "Red dude with horns" didn't become the standard depiction of demons until much later.

      • williamdclt 2 hours ago

        In modern representations, I think you'd be hard-pressed to find red-dude-with-horns. Seems like we shifted towards hot-dude-with-something-off (Lucifer series, Good Omens), when we do see red-dude-with-horns I feel like it's meant to be somewhat ironic/on-the-nose (south park, preacher).

        • dahart 2 hours ago

          Hehe, not that that hard pressed. IMDB has a whole horned-demon category keyword: https://m.imdb.com/search/title/?keywords=horned-demon&explo.... And those results don’t even include South Park, nor Hellboy. If I Google image search for “Satan” I get nothing but red horned demons for pages.

          There have always been wolf-in-sheep’s-clothing stories about The Devil too, it’s just a separate category.

    • lotsofpulp 2 hours ago

      12 years old is pretty old for a kid. I remember trying to reason through my grandparents’ religious beliefs at or before age 9, and they had taught me about lots of different demons, gods, etc.

  • agumonkey 2 hours ago

    well the man would have loved to have a chat with H.P. Lovecraft it seems

    • soupfordummies 2 hours ago

      Yeah… was not really expecting that!

      • GuB-42 2 hours ago

        I also didn't expect that, but then I realized that's the work of a teenage boy with a catholic education!

        Teenage boys love badass, edgy stuff. And what's badass and edgy in Catholicism? Demons! As for the art style, it is the style that was popular at the time.

        In a sense, it is not so different from today's kids drawing scenes inspired from their favorite comic. Of course, the painting here shows incredible talent, he is Michelangelo after all, but that doesn't make him less of a kid.

        • agumonkey 5 minutes ago

          as a 20th century dude, i expected edgy medieval stuff to be more like knights in armor with 2 swords and dragons.. but maybe that is a distortion from our era.. maybe most of what people talked about was god, good and evil

  • LegitShady 3 hours ago

    Not his first painting. Nobody picks up a brush for the first time and paints like that. Not an original work either. Just a practice masterstudy, one of many many many he'd made up to that point I'm sure.

    • speff 2 hours ago

      It's impressive that he did it at 12, but like you said, he had years of focused practice under his belt before he did this one. Anyone can do this level of work - they just need to actually learn it. It doesn't require someone be born with talent.

      Articles like this contribute towards the gatekeeping feeling people get about the arts in my opinion.

      • MontyCarloHall 10 minutes ago

        >Anyone can do this level of work - they just need to actually learn it.

        Sorry, that's like saying with enough math practice, any kid could perform at the level of young Terry Tao (e.g. teaching himself calculus at 8, winning a gold medal at the International Math Olympiad at 12). Some people are just intrinsically talented at certain things, and no amount of hard work in people lacking those intrinsic talents will get them to that level. This is indisputable when it comes to athletic talent; everyone would agree that no matter how much an average tall person practices basketball, they will never play at the level of Michael Jordan, LeBron James, or even the lowest ranked NBA player [0], for that matter. Artistic and intellectual talent is no different.

        [0] https://old.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/1oxpng5/til_...

    • frikskit 2 hours ago

      You shouldn’t be getting downvoted. If people would read the article they’d see it’s not an original.

  • fwip 3 hours ago

    I'm inclined to agree with the commenter on the article.

    • mxfh 2 hours ago

      I sure could find some experts for hire to drive up the price of my cultural artifact.

      Without anyone wanting to buy this and spend resources on that, finding claims to proof the contrary might be a quite futile task.

      The whole board of the Museum is non-experts. Nobody has any interest in devaluing that expense.

      In that era even attributing works definively to a single artist and not a school or workshop just feels a bit off.

      https://kimbellart.org/content/nuestro-kimbell

      absurdly well citing reddit comment on the provenance:

      https://www.reddit.com/r/museum/comments/x6k3mm/comment/in89...

  • pstuart 3 hours ago

    I wonder how many Michelangelos we'd have today if we didn't have electronic distraction devices and only had old school tech for "entertainment"

    • TheCycoONE 3 hours ago

      Most of human history we didn't have electronic distraction devices and we have one Michelangelo; the answer is probably not as many as the question implies.

      • Lerc an hour ago

        I don't think such genius is inhibited so much by distraction as it is by lack of support.

        Either that or genius has coincidentally clustered around where the resources have been.

        The world could be so much more vibrant if everyone was supported and nurtured.

        In such a world, many might find much less need to distract themselves with trivialities.

    • boelboel an hour ago

      I'm not educated in painting but will just assume it's similar to music and someone like Mozart. I genuinely believe you wouldn't get as many as you'd imagine. There were few people making music at that time and only a small portion of the population ever had the chance to listen to it (.5-1% around 1750, 5-10% around 1850). We didn't get 10x the number of Mozarts. We got some people who were as talented as him for sure and pushed boundaries and some got famous for it We also got many talented people who wrote very great music which doesn't get played at all anymore, many of those didn't push the boundaries.

      Even with people like Beethoven who're seen as disruptors and wildly popular by general audiences there were talented disruptors at the time who actually did things he's 'known' for and they don't get played at all. Bach himself had largely fallen into obscurity for +-100 years. There's probably only so many Michelangelos or Mozarts people can be taught about in middle school, high school, university.... I believe it's more about the institutions that basically allowed someone like mozart or michelangelo some kinda 'patronage oligopoly', something which barely exists these days. Free market didn't really exist here well into the 1800s, even then you still had gatekeepers. In the end history picked a few winners very loosely related to their 'musical worth'.

    • BeetleB 6 minutes ago

      Do we want more Michelangelos?

    • mamonster an hour ago

      The same as any other century. The whole point of Michelangelo is that he went beyond the limits of his time. To be the Michelangelo of today you need to go beyond the limits/tastes of today, not of Michelangelo's time. And the Michelangelo of today would not be identifiable in any way with Michelangelo given where modern art ended up in terms of style.

      It's like that quote about it taking Picasso 4 years to learn to paint like Raphael but a lifetime to learn how to paint like a child.

      Or think of it this way: Your average math PhD today is way better at math than Galois, Bernoulli, Gauss, etc. But they are nowhere near them because the field moved into a different stratosphere entirely.

    • Ekaros 2 hours ago

      I don't think there is that significant amount of artists that do not draw because entertainment. Artist communities online are doing pretty fine. There might not be enough money for all of them, but drawing is still popular enough hobby.

    • adrianN 2 hours ago

      Children today are expected to go to school and get a well rounded education. They don’t start specializing as apprentice to some master at an early age

    • postalrat 2 hours ago

      They are busy making other stuff. Its OK if you don't appreciate their work.

    • zppln 3 hours ago

      Also consider the tools and materials available today. I don't know much about Michelangelo, but I imagine people's opportunity for sheer iteration (due to availability of qualitys pens, pappers, ink etc) is magnitudes higher (and cheaper) today.

    • adventured 2 hours ago

      They're making art all around you. Some of them are extraordinarily famous.

      Movies, video games, music.

    • lotsofpulp 2 hours ago

      There are plenty, but the value of Michelangelo’s brand is in its’ scarcity.