Sodoma is one of the Renaissance's most enigmatic painters. Celebrated in his time, misunderstood in ours, he painted bodies and souls with the same delicacy, infusing sacred scenes with tenderness, sensuality, and light.
In Sodoma, Painting the Grace, Christian Soleil traces the life and work of this singular artist, from Siena to Rome, from public glory to private excess. Far from scandal alone, Soleil reveals a painter obsessed with harmony, movement, and emotional truth - a master who sought grace not as perfection, but as a fragile balance between flesh and spirit.
Blending biography and art criticism, this book invites the reader to look again: at frescoes alive with softness, at Madonnas shaped by human vulnerability, at a Renaissance less rigid than legend suggests.
A luminous journey into an art that dares to be gentle, and a painter who chose grace as an act of freedom.