Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Deposition


Caravaggio
The Deposition (1602 – 1603)

Known for this most extreme form of Chiaroscuro (light-dark) painting – also called tenebrism, Caravaggio's subjects seem to emerge from complete blackness to be illuminated by some unseen, internal light source to create a hyper realism.

His actual name was Michelangelo; he was from Caravaggio and he followed Michelangelo in history, marking the beginning of the Baroque era.

Caravaggio lived life hard & fast. Presumably, he killed possibly 2 men and was constantly on the run, fleeing to Naples and was thought to embody/create the Neapolitan style of painting at the time.  Caravaggio lived among lower classes and used prostitutes and peasants for religious models, causing consternation with the church.

Died in obscurity and was thrown in a pauper’s pit.  Caravaggio was 38.

Baroque painting relied heavily on foreshortening to eliminate the barrier between the subject and the viewer.  Ordinarily, there was a predella or other pediment that separated you from the subject.  Foreshortening draws the viewer into the painting to experience the event first hand, also a hallmark of the baroque era which could arguably be a natural result of the reformation in which people were encouraged to have a closer, less impeded relationship with religion.

The reason I mentioned Caravaggio's wild life, is because his personal life is reflected in and defines his style of painting - an unknown lights source that emerges from the depths of darkness.



Raphael
The Deposition or Entombment (1507)

While not entirely the composition of the typical "Deposition" or "Entombment" genre, this painting by Raphael is somewhere in between.  As a follower of Michelangelo, Raphael uses some of the postures most notably invented by Michelangelo.  See the contorted twist and turn of Mary tending to the virgin Mary in the lower right.  (This pose is called "The Swoon of Mary")  Not only is this a physically impossible pose, it is nearly identical to the muscular virgin of the Doni Tondo (below) of the same date.  This pose is called Figura Serpentina.

Raphael's Deposition/Entombment contains some of unnatural poses, strange body placement (see the legs below Christ) which gives the subject matter a mystical, pre-baroque quality, aligned with the religious beliefs at the time. 


Michelangelo- Tondo Doni - tone corrected.jpg
Doni Tondo, Michaelangelow (1507)



1 comment:

  1. Godspeed, Christine. I will be one of the armchair travelers journeying with you. Would love to see a photo of the Sardinian mollusk that secretes the magical byssus!

    ReplyDelete

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