Caravaggio was one of the most extraordinary characters in the history of art. He was the prototype of the turbulent Bohemian artist, his explosive personality helping to obscure the traditional elements of his paintings. His dramatic use of light and shade and uncompromising realism creating a new pictorial vocabulary for European art. From c1599 he drew on High Renaissance and even antique models, with his decorum defying realism. His influence was indeed greatest on artists in areas of Flemish artistic ascendancy. It is almost impossible to overestimate the influence of Caravaggio.
He was not only the most powerful and influential Italian painter of the 17C, but also one of the prototypes of the idea of the artist as a rebel outside the normal conventions of society, punctuated by disputes with patrons about his unconventional treatment of religious themes. Caravaggio was one of the few real revolutionaries who really changed the history of painting. His aggressively realistic and dramatically lit paintings swept away the remains of the late Renaissance Mannerist style. He marked the beginning of the Baroque painting. Fiercely original Caravaggio had left us a basket of rotting fruits and an aging Madonna that no artist had followed.
1. Caravaggi
o
First created Jun 2005. Version 4.0 - 15 Jan 2018. Daperro. London.
Medusa. 1597. Caravaggio.
A Genius and a Rebel
2. A controversial Artist
Ruskin, a critic and social theorist, saw his
art as ‘signs of an evil mind, ill repressed’
in particular highlighting the ‘perpetual
seeking for and feeding upon horror and
ugliness, and filthiness of sin’.
Portrait of Caravaggio (Detail) by Ottavio Leoni.
‘Greatly respect reality’
Giulio Mancini, 1619
“A genius or an Evil one
inspired by a demon?”
3. Caravaggio
Caravaggio is an extraordinary painter with a controversial life.
He was a violent man by nature and a known killer. Caravaggio
was the most influential artist of Italy, as well as Europe.
“Caravaggio’s innovation was a radical naturalism that combined
close physical observation with a dramatic, even theatrical, with
the use of chiaroscuro, the shifting from light to dark with little
intermediate value [strong contrast]”. Typically his paintings have
a black background with a strong directional light source.
Portrait of Caravaggio (Detail) by Ottavio Leoni.
Head of Medusa. c1598. Head of Goliath. 1609.Head of Goliath. 1607Head of Holofernes. c1598.
1572-1610
Violence, naturalism and chiaroscuro are
the three main features of Caravaggio.
4. 1571 Born 29 Sept in Milan
1577 Father dies
1584 Apprenticeship with Simone Peterzano
until 1588
1592 Moved to Rome
1599 First public commission
1603 Litigated for defamation.
1605 Arrested for carrying a fire arm without a
permit, in a fight. Wounded a lawyer.
1606 Flees Rome for Naples following murder
1608 Stays in Malta and becomes a knight
1609 Returns to Naples badly wounded
1610 Dies of malaria on 18th July.
Caravaggio has a very short professional career
(less than 20 years). There are some 90 known
paintings by him today.
We can divide his professional life 3 periods :-
1 His Bacchus years as a budding artist.
2 His Prime years, when he won his first public
commission and started to paint large scale
canvases, as an professional artist.
3 His Fugitive years, after he killed a man and
running away from the law
Milestones in His Life
Paintings from 1596-7, 1600-1, 1606-7.
Bacchus
Years
1592-1599
Prime
Years
1599-1606
Fugitive
Years
1606-1610
5. Early Bacchus paintings
Early in his career, Caravaggio painted a series of sensuous and erotically provocative homo-eroticism
paintings. These are his ‘Bacchus paintings’.
6. The Sick Bacchus (Self Portrait)
The Sick Bacchus (Detail. A self-portrait).
c1593. Galleria Borghese, Rome.
Caravaggio arrived in Rome in 1592.
One of the earliest Bacchus painting
was his self-portrait known as the ‘Sick
Bacchus’. He painted himself possibly
because he was not able to afford a
model. This is the first depiction of a
self portrait in which the painter was
the main subject of the painting.
7. Boy with a Basket of Fruit. c1594.
This painting contrasts the
youthful adult with the over-
ripe fruits and rotting leaves.
There is a hint of melancholy
in his eyes. The basket of
fruits was given equal
importance as the portrait.
Boy with a Basket of Fruit
His early paintings usually
have a shallow background
with limited palette of earth
colours. He was known for
using unconventional models.
12. Caravaggio was not the first to paint the
masculine beauty. Michelangelo spent all his life
depicting it, either in paint or in sculpture. The
origin of male nude dated back to the Ancient
Greek. What make Caravaggio’s ‘Bacchus
paintings’ particularly provocative were the age
of his subjects.
Some speculated that Caravaggio was a
homosexual, but there is no documented evidence
that he was. With his volatile personality one can
never be sure.
Some commentators suggested that Caravaggio
painted these paintings to satisfy a particular
taste. Cardinal Francesco Del Monte, his patron,
was indulged in a hedonistic lifestyle.
So Caravaggio might have painted these for
money or even for a cheeky amusement. After
Caravaggio first successful public commission,
when he became well known, he only painted a
couple of this type painting for the rest of his life.
Is Caravaggio a homosexual?
Baccus 1596 - Caravaggio painted a
shaking hand with ripples on the wine.
The laurel in the Sick Bacchus became a
crown of vine leaves.
13. Caravaggio was one of the first Italian still life painter. In his early paintings he often
include fruits. He also liked to have the basket of fruits delicately balanced on the edge
of the table, as if it is about to fall off the painting and into our space. On the odd
occasions he included other still life objects, like a jar of water or a jug of wine.
Details. The Supper at Emmaus. C1600-01. Details. Repentant Magdalene. C1596-97.
Still Life
15. This is a masterpiece of painting by Caravaggio. When he made this, nobody had seen anything like it
since the Roman some 1500 years ago. It sparked off a new beginning in still life painting. The painting
was full of details, marvellously painted with perfection. Yet the fruits were full of imperfections, insect
holes, predications, pest damages as the rots were setting in. He painted these fruits again and again, as
if he was telling us something about life, death, decays, temptations as well as beauty. Note also the
basket was balanced on a knife-edge, as if the basket in about to fall into our own space.
16. Vanitas
We often find an intrusive skull on Dutch still life painting, like the painting by Frans Hals (left). It is
known as a Vanitas, after the goddess of Truth. In Western art, it is a comment on the transient nature
of life, reminding of us will death. Caravaggio’s basket of fruits was his Vanitas, reminding us of our
own mortality. Caravaggio was fiercely original as no other established artist did this since.
20. His first public commission was big. Caravaggio had never painted such large canvases before. It was
at a time when the Catholic church was facing the challenge from the protestant and responded with a
display of their the Catholic wealth, to make Rome the unrivalled capital of Christianity.
First Success
21. The Calling of St Matthew. 1599-1600.
The Calling of St Matthew
22. Having the his first public commission was
an important turning point for Caravaggio.
Prior to this period, Caravaggio
experienced poverty and struggled to make
a living in Rome. He nearly died, from the
plague. He had convalesced to the nuns’
care. The experience marked him forever.
The exact time is uncertain. It was about
1598 .
He had considerable problems to fulfil the
commission, mainly due to his fiercely
realistic approach to religious subjects. He
had to modify and to repaint the paintings,
several times. Yet like this extraordinary
realistic depiction of the aging old man
(the identity St Mathew in the painting is
ambiguous) with his spectacles, without
any glamour or grandiose, Caravaggio did
what no one did before.
The Calling of St Matthew
24. The Inspiration of St Matthew
The original work was rejected because Caravaggio
had painted the Saint’s dirty foot sticking out of the
painting at eye level. The painting was replaced by
a different version of the painting.
In these painting, Caravaggio had formally adopted
his technique of chiaroscuro – light-dark.
A recoloured first version of the painting from a black and white
photo. The painting was destroy in WW 2.
26. The Martyrdom of St Matthew
Self Portrait, The Martyrdom of St Matthew . Detail.
On the Martyrdom of St Matthew, Caravaggio
painted the moment of his martyrdom. St
Matthew was linked to the naked executioner
through the arm that grasps him. St Matthew
also raised his hand to defend himself and also
a palm was offered to him by an angel. Other
characters arranged in a circle, were in dismay.
St Matthew, The Martyrdom of St Matthew.
27. Caravaggio was obsessed about beheading. He painted a series of paintings on the
subjects, reflecting his nature of a violent man. In later paintings, he used his own
beheaded head to substitute for the victim’s head, as if he was say “here is my head, come
and get it”.
Beheading
29. Versions of Judith Beheading Holofernes
Caravaggio 1598-1602.
The lacking of a more precise dating (either before or after
Caravaggio first public commission), make it more difficult
to understand the circumstances when Caravaggio
painted the work. Caravaggio had chosen the most
horrific moment of partial decapitation. Judith was shown
with mixed emotion of determination and repulsion. This
painting is the first of a series of painting on decapitation.
However, the painting does add to our understanding to
the violent nature of Caravaggio, the man, with numerous
criminal records of violence.
Disputed Caravaggio c1607
Artemisia c1614-20
The second painting is hotly disputed
as a Caravaggio’s painting (left). It
was found in an attic in 2014,
Toulouse, France.
The Artemisia version (right) was
painted in 1614-20 by the daughter of
Caravaggio’s friend Orazio Gentileschi.
I think her version is much more
believable. Artemisia was greatly
affected by Caravaggio’s painting. She
painted herself as Judith and her rapist
Agostino Tassi as Holofernes.
30. David with the Head of
Goliath. c1605 or 1610 .
David and Goliath
Did Caravaggio offer his head
for exchange of pardon?
31. It was suggested that Caravaggio always used models for his portraits. In his early career, he used
himself and friends to pose for him, like his girlfriend Fillide Melandroni (above). But it was the realism
of his saints that distinguishes Caravaggio from other painters.
35. Portrait of Alof de Wignacourt. 1608.
Malta Period
Caravaggio stayed in
Malta for a time as a
fugitive to avoid being
caught by the police.
36. The Supper at Emmaus
The Supper at Emmaus. c1601. National Gallery, London
37. Supper at Emmaus. 1601. Caravaggio. National Gallery. London.
The Bible tells the story of two apostles meeting a stranger on their way
to the village of Emmaus. They talked about Jesus’ Crucifixion and his
body’s disappearance from his tomb.
At dinner, the stranger blessed and broke the bread, prompting the
apostles to recognize that the stranger was Jesus. He then vanished from
their sight.
On the left of the painting was
probably Cleophas, one of the
apostles. On the opposite was
Peter, who wore a sea shell to
show he was a pilgrim. The
innkeeper was depicted standing
beside Jesus.
Why did the apostles not
recognise Jesus?
Supper at Emmaus 1601
38. In the age of oil-lamps and flickering candles, the painting’s dark background can easily blend into its
surroundings, creating an illusion of reality.
Supper at Emmaus 1601
39. Jesus was depicted as a young beardless man with a
feminine look wearing a bright red gown, different from
the traditional images of Christ. Perhaps it was the
changed appearance of a resurrected Jesus that his
apostles did not immediately recognise him?
The Innkeeper, with a scarf on his head, was looking at
Jesus, emotionless. Why did Caravaggio include him? Was
he there to represent the non-believers? Or did he see
Jesus as just another man?
Peter (presumed) with
foreshortening arms penetrating
into the observer’s space.
Cleophas, wearing a rag, with
arms supporting himself.
A solemn Jesus with an unimpressed innkeeper. The
innkeeper’s shadow conveniently casting a halo above
Jesus.
The apostles were clothed like labourers and
not in robes. Cleophas’ coat had a hole at the
elbow, which protruded from the painting. He
was shown pushing himself up at the moment
Jesus revealed his true identity, by blessing the
bread.
Peter, with his crooked nose and untidy hair,
threw his foreshortened arms in a gesture of
utter astonishment, echoing the Crucifixion. His
arm stuck out from the painting, his right hand
looked ‘out of focus’ and slightly larger than his
left.
Supper at Emmaus – the people
40. Caravaggio could only have copied the fruits in autumn, even though
the Resurrection occurred around Easter. He was originally trained as a
still-life painter and took the subject seriously, declaring that ‘it took as
much skill to paint a good picture of flowers as of figures’.
On the table there were bread, water and wine, a roasted chicken and a
wicker basket full of over-ripe fruits, painted to the smallest detail –
lesions, fungal spots and worm holes. The rotting fruits symbolized
death, decay and the transient nature of life. Pomegranate was used
as a metaphor for the crown of thorns and the apples & the figs
represent man’s original sin. The wilting vine leaves and grapes related
to red wine; the blood of Christ.
What sort of light illuminates the
painting? The most likely
explanation is that the painting
must been painted in a cellar with
a small window with a strong
beam of sunlight. The basket
teetering on the edge of the
table. Some say it creates
tension. Others, suggest it
creates an illusion effect of the
basket falling out of the painting. I
think, an apostles had shifted the
table accidentally, in the
confusion of recognising the
resurrected Jesus
Supper at Emmaus – the table
42. Supper of Emmaus. 1606. Oil. Caravaggio. Pinacoteca di Brera. Milan
This work of the same event was
painted by Caravaggio, whilst he
was on the run, after he had
committed murder. It was five to six
years after the original and included
an extra person, a maid.
Far more subdued, with figures
emerging into the light, a limited
palette was used with no bright
colours. His later paintings all
shared this quality.
This image of Christ was more traditional. The expressions of the subjects were more sober, their
gestures restrained and less theatrical. The table is comparatively bare including bread, a bowl, a
plate and a jug. The basket of fruits is gone. The subjects are older, their youthfulness disappeared.
A transformation from a rich, colourful and dramatic depiction to a darker and more ‘mundane’
vision of the same event. Does this reflect the state of Caravaggio’s mind while on the run?
Supper at Emmaus 1606
43. Supper of Emmaus. 1606. Pinacoteca di Brera. Milan
Supper at Emmaus 1606
44. St John the Baptist
Caravaggio was a rebel. I cannot
imagine anyone would paint a
saint like this.
51. The Martyrdom of St Ursula
The Martyrdom of St Ursula, 1610.
St Ursula refused to marry a pagan Hun, who fired an arrow at her, at point blank. This was
Caravaggio’s last painting.
52. Caravaggio, the man
Michelangelo Merisi, commonly known as Caravaggio,
was very influential in the history of painting.
Born in Milan c1571, he served his art apprenticeship.
He then moved to Rome in search of work between
1588-1590.
His life was unruly, dramatic and violent. Constantly in
trouble with the police for street brawls, he committed
a murder in 1606 which forced him to be on the run,
for the rest of his life.
Caravaggio fled to Naples, then to Malta (1607)
where he was knighted by the Order of St. John. After
assaulting a justiciary, he was imprisoned.
Subsequently he escaped to Sicily and went to Naples
in 1609 where his enemies finally caught up with him.
The following year he travelled by boat to Porto
Ercole (nr. Rome), where he was arrested by mistake
and released. He contracted a fever here and died on
the 18 July 1610, age 38.
The severed head of Goliath, painted
in 1609-10, is probably a self-portrait.
Shown offering his own head, like a
hunted creature, wanted by the
authorities and enemies alike.
53. The Technique & Styles
The single most important hallmark of Caravaggio’s
painting styles is a dark, often shallow background,
with the use of limited earth colours. Mostly
illuminated by a single strong light source, diagonally,
creating a stark contrast between brightness and
blackness (chiaroscuro).
He painted with a vivid and uncompromising sense
of realism, exemplified by dirty feet, rotting fruits,
shabby, ageing saints and the use of coarse peasant
type in contemporary clothing. His paintings are
overwhelmed with the truthfulness of seeing and all
the subtleness of humanity; its highs and its lows.
Caravaggio liked to shock, using provocative,
dramatic and violent images - bold gestures,
deliberate brutality, severed heads, streams of blood,
probing wound. He challenged accepted
conventions and in his painting, The Death of the
Virgin, he used a prostitute (allegedly his girlfriend
Lena) as model for the Madonna.
The Death of the Virgin (Detail). 1606. Oil on canvas.
Musee du Louvre, Paris. The painting was rejected by the
church, as it was rumoured that Caravaggio’s model was
‘a dirty whore from the Ortaccio’. Many of his works
offended religious sensibilities.
Judith Beheading
Holofernes (Detail) 1598-9.
The Doubting Thomas
(Detail). c1603. Potsdam.
Caravaggio reacted against the falsehood of
mannerism and created realism.
54. Caravaggio establishes the notion of the
rebellious artist, an anti-establishment
figure commentating on society,
challenging our preconceived ideas with
a fiercely unique style, like the coarse
peasant type apostle.
With his passionate belief in the
individual and his uncompromising
realism. Caravaggio remains an
extraordinary painter with an equally
controversial life; violent by nature and a
known killer.
Artist as a Rebel
Portrait of Caravaggio (Detail) by Ottavio Leoni.
With his basket of rotten fruits, swollen
corpse and aging Madonna, he had left
us unique images as his testaments to
his originality.
56. His Famous Followers
It is almost impossible to overestimate the influence of
Caravaggio. He was widely admired and an extremely
influential painter of 17th century.
Among his followers were Orazio Gentileschi (Italian),
Artemisia Gentileschi (daughter), Velazquez (Spanish),
Murillo (Spanish), La Tour (French), Rubens (Belgium) and
Rembrandt (Dutch).
La Tour – Card Players Rembrandt – Anatomy Lecture
Valazquez – Egg Fryer
Is a film like Pretty Baby, in which Brooke Shields plays a 12 year old prostitute directed by Louis Malle, part of the Caravaggio tradition?
57. Music – Beethoven. Violin No in G Minor :
II Adagio.
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The
End
1571 - 1610
Caravaggio on the 100,000 lira bank note