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

2026-01-1613:44372172www.openculture.com

Think back, if you will, to the works of art you created at age twelve or thirteen. For many, perhaps most of us, our output at that stage of adolescence amounted to directionless doodles, chaotic…

Think back, if you will, to the works of art you cre­at­ed at age twelve or thir­teen. For many, per­haps most of us, our out­put at that stage of ado­les­cence amount­ed to direc­tion­less doo­dles, chaot­ic comics, and a few unsteady-at-best school projects. But then, most of us did­n’t grow up to be Michelan­ge­lo. In the late four­teen-eight­ies, when that tow­er­ing Renais­sance artist was still what we would now call a “tween,” he paint­ed The Tor­ment of Saint Antho­ny, a depic­tion of the tit­u­lar reli­gious fig­ure beset by demons in the desert. Though based on a wide­ly known engrav­ing, it nev­er­the­less shows evi­dence of rapid­ly advanc­ing tech­nique, inspi­ra­tion, and even cre­ativ­i­ty — espe­cial­ly when placed under the infrared scan­ner.

For about half a mil­len­ni­um, The Tor­ment of Saint Antho­ny was­n’t thought to have been paint­ed by Michelan­ge­lo. As explained in the video from Inspi­rag­gio just below, when the paint­ing sold at Sothe­by’s in 2008, the buy­er took it to the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Muse­um of Art for exam­i­na­tion and clean­ing.

“Beneath the lay­ers of dirt accu­mu­lat­ed over the cen­turies,” says the nar­ra­tor, “a very par­tic­u­lar col­or palette appeared. “The tones, the blends, the way the human fig­ure was treat­ed: all of it began to resem­ble the style Michelan­ge­lo would use years lat­er in none oth­er than the Sis­tine Chapel.” Infrared reflec­tog­ra­phy sub­se­quent­ly turned up pen­ti­men­ti, or cor­rec­tion marks, a com­mon indi­ca­tion that “a paint­ing is not a copy, but an orig­i­nal work cre­at­ed with artis­tic free­dom.”

It was the Kim­bell Art Muse­um in Fort Worth, Texas that first bet big on the prove­nance of The Tor­ment of Saint Antho­ny. Its new­ly hired direc­tor pur­chased the paint­ing after turn­ing up “not a sin­gle con­vinc­ing argu­ment against the attri­bu­tion.” Thus acquired, 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. About a decade lat­er, and after fur­ther analy­sis, the art his­to­ri­an Gior­gio Bon­san­ti put his con­sid­er­able author­i­ty behind a defin­i­tive con­fir­ma­tion that it is indeed the work of the young Michelan­ge­lo. There remain doubters, of course, and even the noto­ri­ous­ly uncom­pro­mis­ing artist him­self may have con­sid­ered it an imma­ture work unwor­thy of his name. But who else could have cre­at­ed an imma­ture work like it?

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Orig­i­nal Por­trait of the Mona Lisa Found Beneath the Paint Lay­ers of Leonar­do da Vinci’s Mas­ter­piece

When Michelan­ge­lo Cre­at­ed Artis­tic Designs for Mil­i­tary For­ti­fi­ca­tions to Pro­tect Flo­rence (1529–1530)

How Four Mas­ters — Michelan­ge­lo, Donatel­lo, Ver­roc­chio & Berni­ni — Sculpt­ed David

A Secret Room with Draw­ings Attrib­uted to Michelan­ge­lo Opens to Vis­i­tors in Flo­rence

Michelan­ge­lo Entered a Com­pe­ti­tion to Put a Miss­ing Arm Back on Lao­coön and His Sons — and Lost

Michelangelo’s Illus­trat­ed Gro­cery List

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.



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Comments

  • By smokel 2026-01-1616:566 reply

    I don't trust this for one bit. For the owners there is quite the incentive to label this as the work of a genius. But in reality, this is just pretty complex for a 12 year-old to produce by yourself.

    Edit: as others have pointed out, and if I were to actually read the article carefully before commenting, the composition is not attributed to Michelangelo. So it is just a copy. Quite the achievement, but possible for a twelve-year old.

    I once confronted a gallery owner who was proudly presenting a newly discovered work by Mondriaan [1]. An original black and white photo in an old newspaper [2] was shown as proof of authenticity. But many details such as the creases in fabric differ in the original and the new painting. No OpenCV required to see that. Mind you, the picture is already framed with Mondriaan standing next to it. Unlikely that he's still working on it.

    Instead of responding, the gallery owner simply turned away.

    [1] https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bb/Cavalini...

    [2] https://www.vrt.be/vrtnws/nl/2022/03/02/nieuwe-werken-mondri...

    • By prox 2026-01-1618:058 reply

      Just to engage with your “12 year old to produce by yourself” , here are some examples of art made by Picasso in his early teens to mid teens.

      It’s absolutely possible to be that good. Especially in the middle ages / early renaissance with the work you did for guilds and working for masters as an apprentice.

      At eleven years old: https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-3939.php

      At fourteen at his sisters wedding: https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-9.php

      At fifteen https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-11.php

      • By TheOtherHobbes 2026-01-1620:092 reply

        Klimt did the first three when he was 17. There are even earlier works which are not much less sophisticated.

        http://art-klimt.com/early_works.html

        Some people are just prodigies - very, very few, but it's a real phenomenon. Even with early craft training, which people don't get today, exceptional talent still cuts through.

        This is why the common "There's no such thing as talent, it's just hard work" line can't possibly be true. It's soothing to believe that you too could be a genius if only you put the hours in, but it just doesn't work like that.

        Ability is set by a talent ceiling, which is on a bell curve. "Most people don't reach their ceiling" and "There are extreme outliers of native ability" can both be true at the same time.

        • By shermantanktop 2026-01-1620:36

          Along with the self-deluding work=genius idea:

          - Some use extreme outliers to justify their own failure to get close to their ceiling. "I can't be Einstein, why should I try?"

          - Some (parents, coaches, motivational speakers) also use extreme outliers to claim there are no limits/ceilings for others. "If you can dream it you can do it!" (but somehow it doesn't seem to apply to them)

        • By davidwritesbugs 2026-01-1622:421 reply

          > This is why the common "There's no such thing as talent, it's just hard work" line can't possibly be true.

          please stop killing my delusions.

          • By sph 2026-01-1622:56

            The best essay I read last year described how there are two types of artists: those born with great talent, that usually create their masterpieces in their early 20s and coast for the rest of their life, and those that take most of their adulthood before finding their voice, peaking late in their 40s and 50s. The author used Picasso as an example of the former, and Kurt Vonnegut for the latter.

            Gave me the greatest impulse to explore my creative drive like nothing else before, after spending my 20s lost in a daze. I know you’re joking, but if you aren’t, do not lose hope yet.

      • By quotemstr 2026-01-1618:522 reply

        More broadly, we're doing people a disservice today by treating them as juveniles until they graduate college. When someone's that good, we shouldn't waste four years of his life in school he doesn't need, but instead let him be productive immediately out of college.

        Christ a-fucking mighty, in some states, the law says that Michelangelo, had he been alive today,would have had to sit on a booster seat at the age at which he made this painting. Absurd.

        One of my more heretical beliefs is that tech companies should do more hiring of high brilliant people right out of high school.

        • By w10-1 2026-01-1621:172 reply

          > When someone's that good, we shouldn't waste four years of his life in school he doesn't need, but instead let him be productive

          Or perhaps we need more challenging schools. I'd hate to harvest before cultivation has a chance to grow without the constraints of organizational biases

          • By quotemstr 2026-01-1621:253 reply

            18 years is more than enough time to ripen.

            - Marquis de Lafayette was only 19 when he helped the US win independence.

            - Alexander began conquering when he was 20, smashed Persia at 25, and "wept, for there were no more worlds to conquer" at 30.

            - Pascal and Galois did revolutionary math before 20.

            - Mary Shelly wrote Frankenstein at 18!

            We need more rigorous secondary education and a pathway that lets people with rocket-ship trajectories skip useless tertiary education. I am sick and tired coddling mediocre people by pretending geniuses don't exist. If I ran things, I'd set up magnet schools nation-wide.

            • By fudgybiscuits 2026-01-1622:07

              Mozart wrote his first symphony at eight, his first opera at 14. There are some people who have something extra that most people can barely comprehend.

            • By watwut 2026-01-1711:581 reply

              > - Alexander began conquering when he was 20, smashed Persia at 25, and "wept, for there were no more worlds to conquer" at 30.

              I think that we do NOT want to promote this. We need less of that, not more in fact. In fact, we need to keep people like that far away from power.

              • By quotemstr 2026-01-1719:13

                Some of us don't view the world through the lens of effete slave morality. Success is good.

            • By fumar 2026-01-1621:443 reply

              What is stopping people from creating schools for gifted youth?

              • By quotemstr 2026-01-1621:56

                It's controversial in education schools to "track" students, i.e. sort them into ability-categories and tailor each category's experience to its needs. For example, activist groups in New York City have been trying to kill gifted-and-talented schools and programs (e.g. Bronx Science high school) for years. It's painful to watch.

                People can and do create rigorous private schools, but they're not accessible to the masses and often embody the same anti-talent mentality public ones do.

              • By lazyasciiart 2026-01-172:08

                Nothing, based on the existence of thousands of exactly such schools within the US alone.

                On the other hand: a disagreement about the actual definition of gifted, based on the existence of thousands of such schools in the US alone. "Gifted" in some jurisdictions simply means something anodyne like "top 10%" which obviously doesn't get close to creating an actually targeted school environment for your Mozarts.

              • By stinkbeetle 2026-01-1623:33

                Communists.

          • By Wolfenstein98k 2026-01-1621:40

            Hard to make a school designed for a very small group of students. Who's paying?

        • By dennis_jeeves2 2026-01-1623:061 reply

          >One of my more heretical beliefs is that tech companies should do more hiring of high brilliant people right out of high school.

          I have more. Most average people need less education. No point in putting them through 15+ years of 'education'. They can start working at least part time by the time they are 12 or so. This way they also grow up psychologically very soon.

      • By vilhelm_s 2026-01-1618:481 reply

        But he had not been an apprentice before making this, he started the apprenticeship that year, and this is supposed to be the first thing he ever painted.

        > Michelangelo's biographers—Giorgio Vasari (1511–1574) and Ascanio Condivi (1525–1574)—tell us that, aside from some drawings, his first work was a painted copy after a well-known engraving by Martin Schongauer (1448–1491) showing Saint Anthony tormented by demons. Made about 1487–88 under the guidance of his friend and fellow pupil Francesco Granacci, Michelangelo's painting was much admired; it was even said to have incited Ghirlandaio's envy. [https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2009/michelan...]

        • By prox 2026-01-1619:58

          I can’t respond much too this being Michelangelo’ painting, but if he was an apprentice under his fellow pupil it’s possible that he just did minor things or filled in. It was how you learned. You did final retouching and such.

      • By NonHyloMorph 2026-01-179:10

        The part with being an apprentice in a masters workshop is of great importance in regard to that time imho. Neuroplasticity at that age is insane and if you spent all your time on just that, especially if predisposed to a certain way of processing visuals and image, that is a totally different circumstance then a 12 to 13 year old that is also capable of writing, maths, history, different languages, and all the other things we do in the way generalised education at that age is laid out in our modern world.

      • By vitro 2026-01-1619:022 reply

        True, no phones, no distractions, I can see someone who finds their passion early on to get this good.

        • By estearum 2026-01-172:37

          And who typically have a robust economy for craft built around them.

          So with AI we can expect such artistic development to effectively cease, or to be almost always channeled through the averageness-finding-machines.

        • By neilpmas 2026-01-173:241 reply

          True this - without hacker news I might have emptied the dishwasher.

      • By hahahahhaah 2026-01-171:41

        Wow. A great service to us as these are almost a "photo" into that world.

      • By nextaccountic 2026-01-1618:251 reply

        > It’s absolutely possible to be that good.

        Sure, but not if this is your first painting. Humans can't one-shot art like this

        • By Nition 2026-01-1618:451 reply

          The title is sensationalised. They mean the earliest painting of his that we have. It's also a copy of an existing engraving.

          • By nextaccountic 2026-01-175:24

            Then that's very believable (well, depending on what age he started).

            As a comparison, Mozart's compositions when he was 15 years old was unbelievable, unless you put in context he was already composing music at 5 years old

      • By mbivert 2026-01-1620:081 reply

        Agreeing with the main point; on a tangential note:

        > At eleven years old: https://www.pablo-ruiz-picasso.net/work-3939.php

        This one is a copy (Bargue plate − a famous set of plates designed to train students efficiently). And to be fair, it's not _that_ great of a copy.

        The paintings really aren't impressive either: compare them to student works from e.g. the Angel Academy[0] (yes, they are older than 15). Incidentally, they also use Bargue plates a little to train students, and are far, far more demanding with themselves than Picasso in terms of accuracy and cleanliness.

        Picasso wasn't terrible − he's definitely better than a non-painter − but he's genuinely far from having ever reached the level of his peers.

        It's like comparing a food truck with historical French cooks.

        [0]: https://angelacademyofart.com/student-works/

    • By sltkr 2026-01-1617:32

      I don't have an opinion on whether the attribution is correct, but I don't think the complexity of the composition is a strong argument against it considering the artist was copying the engraving by Schongauer exactly (maybe even painting on top of it?) which takes a lot of the complexity out of it.

    • By abdulhaq 2026-01-1617:32

      You might be right but the gallery owner has probably learnt that disputing the authenticity of his pieces with walk in punters rarely leads to a fruitful discussion

    • By Thorrez 2026-01-188:51

      Is there a consensus among art historians about whether it's a work by Mondriaan or not? Christies seems to say it is: https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6435483

    • By pizzathyme 2026-01-1620:29

      It seems unbelievable that this is the first time the child ever picked up a paintbrush and applied paint to a surface.

      It's probably more like: this is the first "published" final painting he ever did, after doing hundreds of other practice paintings/sketches that don't "count"

  • By Nifty3929 2026-01-1616:002 reply

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

    • By 2b3a51 2026-01-1616:29

      Also on Wikimedia at various resolutions

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Michelangelo_Buonarroti_-...

      I've cropped that little blue sailing ship at the bottom of the canvas to make a wallpaper.

    • By ASalazarMX 2026-01-1616:404 reply

      Jesus Christ, you can see he was going to be an unusual artist by the way he focused on that gaping demon butthole.

      Edit: the butthole is in the original engraving his painting is based on, so not his own vision, fortunately I guess.

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

      • By aruametello 2026-01-1617:171 reply

        > ... gaping demon butthole

        for someone bad at naming things that gives me an idea! a software named gdb ?

      • By xerox13ster 2026-01-1618:261 reply

        Every single one of those demons is also a chimera and so if you look, there’s a half elephant, half fish in the top left corner. If you look in the top right, there’s like a half fish half horse. So if you look at the gaping demon butthole again, and look at the rest of the features around the gaping opening. You’ll realize that it is the lower half of the creature and it is a sea creature you can see there’s like a coral tentacles thing behind it. It’s just a fish‘s mouth. That does also happen to function as the demon‘s butthole, apparently

        • By saintfire 2026-01-1621:04

          This insight won me over on the butthole.

      • By palmotea 2026-01-1617:101 reply

        > Jesus Christ, you can see he was going to be an unusual artist by the way he focused on that gaping demon butthole.

        You know, that might actually be the demons mouth. There are eyes and whiskers and stuff next to it.

        And if that's the case, it would mean the demon's butthole has teeth.

      • By CGMthrowaway 2026-01-1616:43

        That's just typical 12 year old stuff

  • By amarant 2026-01-1615:015 reply

    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 =)

    • By phyzix5761 2026-01-1615:09

      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.

    • By LegitShady 2026-01-1616:12

      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.

    • By mylons 2026-01-1615:23

      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.

    • By scandox 2026-01-1615:371 reply

      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

      • By smithkl42 2026-01-1615:46

        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.)

    • By Mouvelie 2026-01-1615:04

      Fun fact ! Michelangelo hated doing the ceiling thing.

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

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