He learned a lot of painting fundamentals related to Fresco painting. The techniques he was taught were used in his later years during his painting of the Sistine Chapel. A form defining method of drawing was also introduced to young Michelangelo that included advanced shading and lighting techniques which was known as cross-hatching. Domenico Ghirlandaio also influenced Michelangelo’s painting techniques; he exposed him to various techniques and introduced him to ancient sculpture which was one of his most skillful domains in art. After his apprentice-ship at Domenico’s workshop, he acquired a lot more than just artistic techniques due to his stay at the Medici gardens. A massive part of his influence came from the plethora of ideas shared in his social circle at the Medici gardens. Apart from artistic techniques, Michelangelo obtained philosophical knowledge that made him change the way he thought. At such an early stage in life, this helped him accumulate sculpting and painting knowledge, as well as philosophical and political ideas that he soon implemented in his art. Michelangelo’s education altered his view about life. Due to the many philosophical ideas during the Renaissance, he was exposed to a variety of thoughts shared and this impacted the way he perceived …show more content…
His early life refined and defined his artistic creations and made it stand out from others. Michelangelo was particularly interested in human anatomy; he spent a lot of his time studying the human body and understanding the complexity of the way it works. His passion was so strong that he also went against the Church by dissecting corpses which he later on got authorization to do so. A lot of his art also had implementations and portrayals of spiritual ideas and divine meaning behind it. He merged all the knowledge he had acquired and portrayed it in his realistic sculptures; this gave him and his art a personality and an identity. A lot of his sculptures were done with delicate perfection and fascinating detail including but not limited to; perfect drawing and depiction of human veins, muscular tension, bone structure, and nerves’ outlines. Michelangelo had an unprecedented impact on during the Renaissance. His ability to perfect a painting in a realistic manner set standards for the domains he mastered; including painting, sculpture, poetry, engineering and architecture. New ways of painting were introduced along with his success. Although proportionality existed in paintings at the time, Michelangelo’s style merged proportionality and perspective to create the most realistic paintings possible. His sculpting ethics were also different at the time; he used a method where he