What Artists Were Actually Famous in Their Lifetime?
There’s an old stereotype about the “starving artist” having to suffer in poverty and isolation as the world rejects their efforts, and many times in history it’s proved to be true. Even all-time greats such as Vincent Van Gogh and Johannes Vermeer struggled to draw attention to the very works that were later taught in art schools around the world.
But not every successful artist spends a lifetime waiting in vain for the recognition that never arrives. Here are five figures who saw the adulation of the masses, and the accompanying financial windfalls, while they were still around to enjoy the success.
Michelangelo
Italy’s thriving city-states were marvelous places for gifted artists during the 16th century, and no one attracted more demand from wealthy patrons than Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni. Following the stunning successes of his marble-carved Pietà (1498-1499) and David statue (1501-1504), Michelangelo became a favorite of Pope Julius II, for whom he produced the equally breathtaking Moses (1513-1515) as part of an otherwise unfinished mausoleum project. While he primarily viewed himself as a sculptor, Michelangelo also delivered some of humankind’s greatest paintings with frescoes such as “The Creation of Adam” (1508-1512) on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, and he later displayed his talents for design after taking over as chief architect of St. Peter’s Basilica. The nonstop commissions made this Renaissance master a very rich man, even as he lived frugally, while his fame made him the first Western artist to be the subject of a biography while he was still alive.