Yet even though he learned from the great Italian artists of the 16th century, his arrogance was such that he went so far as to say that Michelangelo "was a good man but he did not know how to paint", remarking that the Last Judgment could be painted over and that he could be commissioned to redo it "with honesty and decency and no less quality in the painting". Domenicos Theotokopoulos, better known as El Greco, gained his training as an artist in Crete, Venice and Rome, the three centers of art that he passed through. In 1577, he moved to Spain and made his home in Toledo. His contemporaries found him a difficult personality. El Greco was acclaimed in his own lifetime and was able to. As an artist, he was capable of effective realism, but in his quest for ideal forms, he adopted a number of personal methods: elongated figures, thin faces, distorted foreshortening, dramatic rhythms and constant inventiveness in his use of color far beyond anything others of his day dared to do.