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One of the most extreme cases of love gone bad involves the Italian Baroque sculptor Gianlorenzo Bernini. Bernini's mistress, the wife of one of his assistants, was having an affair with the artist's younger brother. When Bernini discovered their perfidy, he was so incensed that he attempted to kill his brother using an iron crowbar, and sent a hired thug to disfigure the face of his mistress with a razor.
Jacques-Louis David
Jacques-Louis David was a prominent painter during the French Revolution and was intensely involved in the overthrow of the monarchy. A stalwart Jacobin, he voted for the execution of Louis XVI during the National Convention of 1792. As a result of the government's overthrow, David was essentially a dictator of the arts in France until 1794, when he was arrested and imprisoned for a total of six months. During his time in power, he was responsible for much of the revolutionary propaganda that flooded the streets of Paris.
Michelangelo
Some artists develop habits that may spark the creative muse, but are peculiar all the same. Michelangelo had a reputation for being surly and difficult to please. He was suspicious of other artists, onlookers and even members of his own family. His fits of rage were also legendary, so it comes as no surprise that he went through a slew of assistants during his career. He was touchy about his birthright and physical appearance, specifically his nose, which was flattened during a fight when he was a youth.
In his old age, Michelangelo is rumored to have worn a hair shirt beneath his outer garments, in an effort to mimic the trials of St. John the Baptist. Michelangelo also wore boots made from cured dog skin for months at a time. When it came time to remove them, his skin peeled off as well.
Pontormo
Pontormo, the Florentine Mannerist painter, was known for his idiosyncratic behaviors and extreme neuroses. He feared death to such an extreme that he would not tolerate the topic being discussed in his presence. Yet he certainly had a preoccupation with his own various health maladies. During the last two years of his life he kept a diary of his unusual daily concerns. These typically included a preoccupation with his diet (he subsisted on a diet of eggs for months at a time) and digestion: "October 19th, felt sick, like having a cold, and after that, could no longer throw up—and it took me several nights to get the hard stuff out, like it happened to me before in summer. I don't know whether it was the same, since the weather has been very nice, and I ate well all the time; but I began to look a little more after myself." Pontormo also avoided crowds and any kind of public festival. Concerning his work, he would habitually have his projects barricaded off from public view, with no one knowing when he came and went, until the paintings were complete.


Comments
I found this series of vignettes to be interesting, but I was hoping to hear more about the psychological reasons why artists often behave in erratic and lawless ways. Are there any good books on the subject?
Posted by Mark Galik on January 6,2008 | 08:28PM
You forgot Egon Schiele who led an incestuous affair with his sister.
Posted by C on August 3,2009 | 11:31AM