Late Caravaggio. Naples and London
Author(s): Richard E. Spear
Source: The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 147, No. 1223, Art in Northern Europe (Feb., 2005), pp.
140-142
Published by: The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd.
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/20073876
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EXHIBITION
REVIEWS
seem
and the other itaUanate
gothic
as
coexisted
and,
Giusep
peacefuUy
notes
in her exceUent
essay in
pina Perusini
one
or
the choice between
the catalogue,
style
(no. 14), painted either in BeUuno or in
nearby Feltre, and theHerbe pincte (no. 15), in
which
Guarnerino
Antonio
the Paduan
vaguely
to have
por
trayshimselfholding a brush in one hand and
in the other.
herbs
was
new
The
from
introduced
Padua
theotherwas not dictated by theUnguisticties
style of painting
and Venice
a sen
who
Vivarini,
painted
in BeUuno,3
for a church
sational
altarpiece
da Montagnana,
who
left a fres
and to Jacopo
co
in
the
survive
Museum;
cycle
(fragments
to Alvise
thanks
no. 19) in the sala del consigno
NobiU.
Itwas
assim?ated
and
of Palazzo
and Antonio
and
Cesa
Antonio
active
of BeUuno
there.
Their
but
works
Spiazzi, Giovanna Galasso, Rita Bernini and Luca
512 pp. incl. 298 col. pis. + 70 b. & w. ills. (SU
Majoli.
vana Editoriale, M?an,
56. ISBN 88-8215
2004),
Maria
da
785-7.
2 F. Zeri:
'Antonio Rosso da Cadore una serie e alcu
ni problemi', Antolog?a di Belli Arti 4, nos. 14-15 (1980),
pp. 141-44.
3 The
altarpiece was destroyed in the Flackturm in
Berlin in 1945; however a beautiful Vivarini panel of
Sts Jerome and John the Baptist from another altar once
occasionaUy
only
are shown
in the
of impeccable
examples
late gothic woodcarvings
from the busy work
to
from Bressanone
shops of the Val Pusteria,
Brunico (Bruneck) and Tesido
In BeUuno
d'altare was
asked
the Venetian
model
in vogue
and
da Montagnana
the
Jacopo
heroic
and virtuous
feats
were
of
reinforced
the
(no. 17).
of the pala
local
nobiUty
to celebrate
the
of
to
the Romans
from, and fideUty to,
sentiments
Such
forebears.
by
sarcophagus
Sertorianus,which
the discovery
of Gaius
Flavius
in 1480
Ost?ius
testified to the antiquity
on
the city. The mountain
communities,
altar
commissioned
the other hand,
winged
Klocker,
Potsch,
pieces from Hans
Ruprecht
of
Parth, Simon and Veit von Taisten
Michael
and Andr?
hard
and
Cadore
HaUer.
fast rule:
This
Late
division
in S. Lorenzo
was
not
at Selva
a
di
the beautiful altarpiece by Antonio
Caravaggio
Naples and London
8o. Funerary monument to Paul Imhof, from the
circle of Pietro Lombardo. After 1478.Marble.
(S. Croce, S. Croce di Lago).
SOMETIME
(no.31),
strongly influenced
by Viva
coexists with Tyrolean
(no.63).
sculpture
In the city, however,
the situation was differ
a monu
ent. When
Matteo
Cesa
planned
Rosso
rini,
altar (no.27; Fig.79) for his
mental wooden
at BeUuno,
in S. Stefano
fam?y
he was
chapel
by
inspired by the 'sacre conversazioni'
painted
and translated Alvise's
the Venetians
painted
into a carved work
cross-currents
and
had
quences for later figurative art. Unlike
more
situation
fluid
earUer
the time of the greatMichael
the two
late fifteenth
the
at
in the century
Pacher, by the
Ger
cultures,
century
to
each
and Venetian,
apparendy
kept
on one side of a greater
its own path, aware,
on the other of a
in their painting,
modernity
man
in wood.
command
of sculpting
magisterial
are traces of some
in the beau
There
dialogue
tiful wooden
by Andrea
for a church
signed
a
BeUuneUo,
in
sculptor
originaUy from BeUuno but active in FriuU
contacts
where
with
more
apparendy
relationship,
lagous
artists were
the German
(no.46).
productive
in iconographical
ana
An
terms,
can be noted in the beautiful reUef of the
Agony in thegarden (no.43; Fig.80) on the
tomb
of Paul
Imhof,
a member
of a powerful
mercantile fam?y,who died in 1478wh?e en
route from Germany on one of his frequent
FEBRUARY 2005
CXLVII
journeys
between
Venice
and Nuremberg,
and
was buried in the church of S. Croce del Lago.
'Deutsch'
to indicate
and
the
'Welsch'
two
-
northern
the
terms
styles,
one
a
about
1609,
to Sic?y,
escape
subsequent
described inMessina
as
Giacomo
exact
meaning
but
Caravaggio
was
by Baron Niccol?
a
having
in using
di
stravolto. His
cervello
the word
stravolto
is
Ught of his predicament in 1609, expeUed
from theOrder of theKnights ofMalta, and
for
doubly a fugitive, wanted in Rome
and inMalta
for fleeing. Caravaggio's
murder,
are the
after he
left Rome
turbulent
years
focus of the beautiful exhibition seen by the
reviewer
present
used
still
in the Museo
di Capodi
and
(closes
February),
Naples
at the National
this month
Gallery,
6th
monte,
opening
London
(now in the parish church at Cavar
BeUuno
zano),
made
Madonna
AUGUST
uncertain,
if these meetings
conse
significant
any
BEFORE
year after his induction into the Order of
the Knights of Malta, his imprisonment a
month laterfor takingpart in a brawl, and his
the adjective's
gist is clear: that
was
mind
distressed,
Caravaggio's
agitated,
even twisted, which
is hardly surprising in the
and deUberately
of Germanic
Fl?gelalt?re.
ignored the influence
can
We
ask ourselves
79. Virgin and Child enthronedwith Sts Paul, Anthony
Abbot, Joseph, Stephen,John theBaptist and afemale saint,
Painted and g?ded wood,
byMatteo Cesa, ci500.
c.520 by 240 by 47 cm. (S. Stefano, BeUuno).
E. SPEAR
byRICHARD
Universityof
Maryland
altarpieces
I4O
to the exhibition
lent from Berlin
in Feltre has been
(Taisten).
their descent
emphasise
their exemplary
as
1
Catalogue: A nord di Venezia. Scultura e pittura nelle
val?ate dolomitiche tra G?tico e Rinascimento. By Anna
by
along with
exhibition
to make
?
offered
'tanto al rito italiano che tedesco'
altarpiece
in the ItaUan rite as in the German.
much
of a rather
Tisoi,
shadowy
representative
and by Jacopo
da Valenza
local Renaissance,
a faithful, modest
of Alvise,
foUower
(no.41),
a native
not
styles did
partic
1607 a woodcarver
although
in the Trentino
an
provincial artists, including Antonio Rosso,
Matteo
in
fuse,
ularly
from Tesero
dei
transformed
two
The
of the patrons.
to 22nd May).1
(23rd February
are indeed erratic,
late pictures
Caravaggio's
swinging from
of
chaos
the powerful, mannered
acts of mercy (cat. no.4;
Naples
a pattern of such
Fig. 81), wherein
begins
the Seven
only;
confusinglypositioned bodies that often it is
difficultto teUwhich limb belongs towhom;
to the
three majestic,
SiciUan
altarpieces
the very late Denial
of St Ursula
press upon one
Martyrdom
figures
urgency.
A
recent
classical
comparatively
to
(nos. 10-12;
Fig.82);
of St Peter (no. 17) and
(no. 18; Fig.83), whose
relendess
another with
cleaning
of the latter canvas
surprisinglyuncovered a disembodied hand
that bizarrely
shoots out from
in a futile effort to protect
saint.
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almost
nowhere
the
submissive
EXHIBITION
1606. 390 by
8i. The seven acts ofmercy,by Caravaggio.
260 cm. (Pio Monte deUa Misericordia, Naples; exh.
Museo
di Capodimonte, Naples).
REVIEWS
82. Burial ofSt
Lucy, by Cara
vaggio. 1608.
408 by 300 cm.
(S. Lucia,
Syracuse, on
deposit at the
there are twenty
count,
By this reviewer's
one
extant,
securely
original,
post-Roman
GaUeria
di
Regionale
Palazzo BeUomo,
paintings by Caravaggio
(excluding the
Madonna del Rosario in Vienna, which is
Syracuse;
exh. Museo
a Roman
or twenty-two
picture),
probably
if the Nativity,
stolen thirty-five years ago in
seventeen
is added.
That
of those
Palermo,
were
was
a remarkable
in Naples
to see the three SiciUan
just
in one
the visit
gaUery made
In addition,
the National
Gal
Naples).
exhibited
achievement:
altarpieces
worthwh?e.
sent its
at Emmaus
(no.i)
lery, London,
Supper
to
in the Brera
the later version
hang beside
StiU rarer was
the welcome
oppor
(no.2).
were
which
about
also painted
four years
vision
apart
evolved.
interesting
was
surely
was
which
sadly
career
Malta,
in
in
the
exhibition only by the SleepingCupid (no.8)
Malta (mostprobably
and PortraitofaKnight of
Antonio
ation
MarteUi;
no.9)
(no. 15) isMaltese
argues
in
the
?
catalogue.2
unless
too,
the Annunci
as David
Stone
late
Caravaggio's
masterpiece, the Beheading ofStJohn theBap
tist in VaUetta,
could
its size and, as with
included
nately
not be borrowed
due
to
in Malta,
the St Jerome
in the catalogue
(no.7) but unfortu
not lent, the condition
of the Portrait
ofAlofdeWignacourt in theLouvre precluded
its travel (oddly the latter is described in the
preface
a
not
and
in Ferdinando
securely
autograph
Bologna's
work).
essay as
ExceUent
fuU-sizedigital reproductions of theBeheading
and St Jerome
served
as useful
substitutes.
The
reviewer's
taUy of
includes
paintings
which
(no.3),
twenty-two
post
in
the St Francis
looked
entirely
con
vincing as a work of c. 1607. The St John the
Baptistfrom theGaUeria Borghese (no. 19) is
included,
it seems
but
too,
from
putably
the second
Its tighdy modeUed
are
not
phase of Caravaggio's
the year he
spent
represented
Naples.
This
Cremona
and sim?arly reveal the speed with which
Caravaggio's
The most
FlagellationofChrist inRouen is theonly other
widely accepted late original not lent to
Roman
tunityof considering together both versions
of Salomewith thehead of theBaptist (nos. 13 and
14), respectivelyfromMadrid and London,
late
di
Capodimonte,
than
NeapoUtan
indis
late work,
inepdy
drawn
rightwrist and hand or impossibly long right
cited in docu
leg. If in fact this is the picture
as
ments
on the eve of
been
having
painted
in 1610
from Naples
Caravaggio's
departure
and themodeUing of the Baptist's body and
melancholy mood fitweU with that idea
then
either
canvas
the
was
completed
or
reworked by another hand, or during his final
into
could
both
Caravaggio
lapse
natu
into his more
carelessness
and sUp back
months
raUsticRoman
penchant
style (that he had a paraUel
to re-use
earUer
designs
is evident).
The descriptive modelling of the elaborate
armour in theMartyrdom ofSt Ursula (Fig.83)
as
the latter alternative,
support
might
the unsettling
effects of a troubled mind.
half of the twenty-two
paintings
Nearly
canvases.
are
Even
big, multi-figured
granting
could
over four
this is an impressive
output
phase,
an artist who
to resettle
six
had
years from
times in five different cities and spent a month
It is no
that
therefore,
surprise,
of only a smaU number
of securely
an
documented
lost works
exception
being
in prison.
know
we
scenes
the four
of the Passion
was
a 'Cristo
portacroce',
?
document
and
a now-lost
from
are
Problems
reaction
learn
that new
hardly
of
essay
on
the history of the critical
late style could have
to
Caravaggio's
its scope, just
widened
as we
ever
convincing.
and
attribution,
chronology
receive most
in the cata
attention
attributions
patronage
logue. An
that Caravaggio
di Giacomo, one
agreed to paint forNiccol?
of which
period'.
face and finicky foUage
in Caravaggio's
the Baptist's
unparaUeled
to mention
less
thatCaravaggio painted quickly during his last
as a close
of
analysis
Susinno's Life of thepainterwould have been
welcome.
the
on
there is nothing
broadly,
of Caravaggio's
late art nor is
a reconsideration
of received
ideas, as
More
influence
there
PhiUp Sohm provided in his exceUent, but
Deaths'.3
uncited,
study 'Caravaggio's
was
Another
missed
opportunity
sideration
of economic
data,
the con
scant as
they
are
for thisperiod ofCaravaggio's life.Niccol?
Giacomo's
payment
'Cristo portacroce'
documented
price
di
of 46 onze in 1609 for the
as the
is significant
only
a
for
painting
by Cara
vaggio after 1607. (Tradition has it that the
painter
received
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1,000
scudi
CXLVII
apiece
for two of
FEBRUARY 2005
14^
REVIEWS
EXHIBITION
(no.6) possibly painted in two
S. Domenico
1606
campaigns,
as
1609?10,
Bologna
are
the
And
what
and
contends?
questionably
dates of the beautiful Salome with thehead of
the Baptist from Madrid
(no. 13) and the
Annunciation from Nancy (no. 15)? For the
presentwriter they should be dated 1606-07
and C.1608 respectively, although it is doubt
ful ifwhat we now see in the lower half of the
Annunciation
is from Caravaggio's
brush.
are to be
of the exhibition
organisers
of a
for recognising
the virtue
commended
The
tighdy focused project and for including only
and five early
'new proposals'
(nos.20-24)
of lost works
these ten
(nos.25?28);
five
'copies'
not be exhibited in London.
pictures w?l
of the new
None
Indeed,
vincing.
is con
however,
proposals,
and
the Ecce Homo
(no.22)
Salome with thehead of theBaptist (no.23) are
so implausible that their attribution seriously
their
undermines
as
authority
proponents'
on
experts
Caravaggio.
Far more
is the status of the St Fran
subde
cis in prayer from Carpinetto
that of the arguably
Romano
versus
S. Maria
deUa Concezione,
not on view.
This
(no.20)
in
repUca
which was
better
Rome,
writer
that the stiff
beUeves
fabrics and poorly drawn hand and skuU of
83.Martyrdom ofSt Ursula, by Caravaggio.
exh. National GaUery, London).
the
1610. 143 by 180 cm. (Banca Intesa,Naples;
version
former
reveal
it to be
a
copy
skuU in the
(compare the superblymodeUed
St Francis
of tech
from Cremona),
regardless
in its favour.
the
arguments
Surprisingly,
was not
in
Florence
much-debated
Toothpuller
to authen
its serious claim
exhibited
despite
nical
his
are
the data
but
Sic?y,
of about
the equivalent
a sum
to the
sim?ar
scudi,
in
altarpieces
was
That
insecure.)
one
hundred
feesCaravaggio commanded forhis Sacrificeof
Isaac in 1603 (GaUerie degU Uffizi, Florence)
and an unspecified picture forCiriaco Mattei
in 1602, probably the St John the Baptist
(Musei CapitoUni, Rome). It is less than the
125 scudi he was paid for the Taking ofChrist
of
of
Ireland,
(National
GaUery
the 150 scudi for the National
at Emmaus
of 1601. Of course
Supper
no
forms
payment
pattern, nor does
1602-03
or
DubUn)
GaUery's
a
single
one know the size ofNiccol?
canvas.
But
four figures,
the
having
that,
is suggestive
demand
for
Bologna
and
writings
there might
art,
in its price.
to the catalogue
introduction
long
Ferdinando
as
described
presumed
post-Roman
Utde increase
A
di Giacomo's
it was
the payment
despite
Caravaggio's
have been
earUer
that
given
by
his
repeats
is peppered
generaUy
regrettably
with petty infightingwith his rivals. Much
more
are
substantial
on
the essays
Caravaggio
in Naples (by Antonio Ernesto Denuzio),
Malta (the richest of the group, by Keith
and
Sciberras
David
(by Gioacchino
Messina
teUa Spagnolo)
and
Stone),
Syracuse
Barbera
and Dona
(by Vincenzo
and Palermo
A st?l larger team of scholars wrote
Abbate).
the individual
entries. Given
the surfeit of
on
Uterature
state
of
I42
although
sensitive
smaU
for aU of
the
they summarise
it
than expand
rather
some offer
provocative
artist,
knowledge
significandy,
ideas
and
include
the
criticism.
iUustrations
the paintings
FEBRUARY 2005
and
assigned
CXLVII
Appendixes
data
summary
to Caravag
as weU
as
registers of docu
to
purported
early references
are
but
works,
ly autograph
they
incomplete
and seem to have been hastily put together.
gio's
ments
The
the
late years,
and other
colour
for many
Any
pubUcations
in quaUty.
are uneven
plates
comparative
hope
in
of
the
come
not
does
catalogue's
design
standard
of Electa
figures
are
ticity, which
to
up
and
missing.4
in Naples
gaUeries
chronology
in the catalogue
thwarted by the absence
to
essay devoted
Caravaggio's
technique
of
a
pathetic
Roman
picture.
The Caravaggio
of an
and
to the condition of the paintings,which is
often poor; nor did the low level of Ughting
help. Repainted or abraded surfaces lacking
their final layers cannot be compared with
those
that are
weU-preserved
but photographs
in good
condition.
altarpiece
The
in Sic?y was
the reviewer's
(and
of seeing
the original)
memory
it can be to form
how misleading
emphasise
a view
of
late style from the other
especiaUy from the glorious
Caravaggio's
altarpieces,
only
stolen,
distant
Sic?ian
wreck
of the Burial ofSt Lucy (no.io; Naples only;
or from
Fig. 8 2)
other
theBorghese David
St Andrew
(no.5).
the dates
TeUingly,
are the most
early
thin passages,
such
as in
(no. 16) and Crucifixionof
of the latter two works
was
disputed:
as c. 1605?06
inRome
David
painted
or (more
Ukely)
as
as
late as 1610 inNaples? Does the Crucifixion
of St Andrew belong to the first or second
NeapoUtan period? Although the saint'sbody
a late work because
con
of its abraded
impUes
the better-preserved
soldier in armour
dition,
to the first
is a more
reUable gauge
and points
Was
from
the
Flagellation
NeapoUtan
phase.
tested
been
pre
a lost
original
reaUy records
it looks Uke a weak
spin-off,
of Caravaggio's
superb
parody
Holofernes
of 1607.
was
have
(no.26)
its
Captions
resolving questions
should
cisely in this context.With regard to the five
'copieantiche', it is questionable ifJudith and
Instead,
industry
at
Incredibly,
slackening.
exhibitions
work
are
of Caravaggio
the planning
in
shows
least
and
no
sign of
three more
his
stage,
foUowers'
the most
dubious ofwhich wiU focus on the supposed
serve some
itw?l
autograph
repUcas. Perhaps
if only to clear the air of so many
bad
purpose,
to a great, rare master.
attributions
1
exhibition was organised by the Soprintendenza
theNational GaUery, London, and theMet
of Art, New York, which gracious
ropoUtan Museum
lywithdrew from the project when difficulties arose in
The
of Naples,
securing loans for aU three venues.
2
Catalogue: Caravaggio: Ultimo tempo, 1606-1610. Edit
contributions
ed by Nicola
by
Spinosa, with
Spinosa, Ferdinando Bologna, Antonio Ernesto
Denunzio, Keith Sciberras, David M. Stone, Gioacchino
Barbera, DonateUa
Spagnuolo and Vincenzo Abbate.
192 pp. incl. 50 col. pis. + 85 b. & w. ills. (Electa Napoli,
Nicola
35. ISBN
88-510-0223-1.
2004),
EngUsh
Naples,
edition: Caravaggio: thefinal years. ?40
(HB). ISBN
88-510-0277-0; ?25
(PB). ISBN 88-510-0264-9.
* P. Sohm:
'Caravaggio's Deaths', Art Bulletin 84
(2002), pp.449-68.
4
By contrast, the exhibition's rich website, www.
is expertly planned and at
caravaggioultimotempo.it,
the forefront of itsgenre, containing extensive practical
information, a checkUst of the paintings, a gaUery of
images and the complete text of the catalogue's preface
by Nicola
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Spinosa.