Many of Michelangelo's works are cemented in history as a perfect examples of Renaissance art, created by one of the most renown artists of the Italian Renaissance. It is also believed that his artworks aside, Michelangelo was also an adept in the study of human anatomy and that this side of his talent found its way into many of his works. In what may be argued as his most famous painting, The Creation of Adam, the similarities in the lines of the painting and a view of the lateral bi-section of the human brain is uncanny. The painting itself, in this context may hint at a suggestion that religious beliefs of the time were beginning to be challenged with the study of science to explain the unknown and divine. This theme of human anatomical knowledge seems to present itself in other pieces that he created during this time, as well. …show more content…
Some of these advances influenced architectural works of art as evidenced in the construction of more delicate arches and domes made possible by the understanding of the inherent strength of the parabola, which can be represented in mathematical form. We see this rendered in physical form when we look at some of the architecture throughout Europe during this