I don't think that's fair at all, and completely misinterprets both the meaning of artistic skill and probably the intention of the artist. Nobody measures the anatomical accuracy of the figures of the Cistine Chapel in order to assess Michaelangelo's status as an artist, and to my mind the overall effect of the image on the Shroud compares very well with any of the artist's contemporaries, such as Giotto, and also with later masters such as Durer and, indeed, da Vinci. I would agree that a single artwork is insufficient to classify any artist as greater than one with a much greater portfolio, as it were, but I certainly challenge Slowvehicle to find a more striking image of nobility in death at a Trader Joe's and to post it here.
First, Buonarotti, did, in fact, not only produce life-like, and eyecatching, human figures, he did so on concave surfaces, painting to allow for the distortion. The anatomical silliness of the image on the COQ is the first thing one notices, regarding the image.
Second, I am glad that, to you, the anatomically inaccurate, posturally impossible,mechanically preposterous, bit of torture porn (so very authentic in its new testament and historical details, to boot) on the CIQ moves you so as an image of "nobility in death". I do not find it so; nor did I offer the flashboards at TJ's as a representative of such.
What survives of the figure on the CIQ demonstrates a painfully inept hand of boringly banal technique.
i'm afraid Slowvehicle is confusing the argument against authenticity, which certainly does depend on anatomical accuracy, realistic fall of hair, bloodflows, and so on, with the argument for artistic impression, which certainly doesn't. It may be that the artist could indeed replicate the image of a real corpse, but decided not to because it looked grotesque rather than God-like, which was, of course, his intention.
I'm "afraid" you misread my post. There is no "argument for authenticity", the CIQ is 800 years old. My post was in response to the supposed "artistic excellence" of the markmaking. Tastes vary, certainly; but the CIQ is technically outdone by the Lascaux doodles; graphically surpassed by the Two Buck Chuck ad.
Just as a sideline, I had been feeling I knew some sort of similar image to which the Shroud figure could be compared, and felt sure I had seen a painting of a Gothic warrior or possibly a Viking in a similar pose, and had been searching the internet to see if I could find something, when suddenly the Oscars were announced. And there it was.
Did you, perhaps, omit a sentence, or a link?
Where what was?