Michelangelo’s works hidden in ‘secret room’, researcher says
The Straits Times
A document trail showed he planned to hide his works “because otherwise it would all end up with a nephew he detested". Read more at straitstimes.com.
Rome - Renaissance artist Michelangelo ordered many of his artworks to be hidden by his pupils in a secret room to protect them for posterity, an Italian researcher claimed on March 4.
According to renowned art historian Giorgio Vasari, the Italian genius burned a large number of his own drawings and sketches before his death in Rome in 1564.
But researcher Valentina Salerno says she has unearthed unpublished archival documents that reveal a plot to squirrel away his works.
“One of these three unpublished documents I found in the archives speaks of a room” kept by students of the Michelangelo school, the origins of which “can be traced back” to the artist, Ms Salerno told AFP on the sidelines of a press conference in Rome.
“Assets are hidden inside this room. These assets are locked away so tightly that they require a system of multiple keys, so that no one can access them without the permission of others,” she said.
Ms Salerno was researching a book on Michelangelo when she came across a document that showed the artist had in 1550 joined the Brotherhood of the Most Holy Crucifix. Those close to him in his final years were members too.

VATICAN CITY, March 16 - Pope Leo met on Monday with an investigative journalist who alleges that a prominent Catholic organisation with ties to right-wing politicians in the U.S. and other countries covered up sexual and financial crimes, which the group firmly denies. Read more at straitstimes.com.












