There are figures who traverse the times without losing their relevance, who manage to make their words and their work immortal in order to prolong the dialogue with humanity. Michelangelo Buonarroti is the paradigm of a man who has transcended his time. What his contemporaries Ascanio Condivi, Francisco de Holanda and Giorgio Vasari said about him, although it is a lot, does not, however, clear up the doubt as to how much the artist was permeable to the Lutheran ideas that were beginning to undermine the foundations of the Church and of a period that has come to an end. His biographers were politically correct in order to mask his heretical deviations – or perhaps blind or complacent in order not to see them – and he had the audacity to wear the scourge of Catholic orthodoxy to escape the control of the Inquisition, which sniffed out talent like a predatory Cerberus. His biographers ...read more