Sunday, December 3, 2017

Paintings by Moretto da Brescia, Palma Vecchio, and Titian

Moretto da Brescia
Adoring Angel
before 1554
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Moretto da Brescia
Adoring Angel
before 1554
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Moretto da Brescia
St Jerome
 before 1554
 oil on panel
National Gallery. London

Moretto da Brescia
St Joseph
before 1554
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Moretto da Brescia
Virgin and Child with St Bernardino and other Saints 
before 1554
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Palma Vecchio
Madonna and Child with St John the Baptist and Mary Magdalene
ca. 1520-22
oil on panel
Musei di Strada Nuova, Genoa

"What was the religious function of religious pictures?  In the Church's view the purpose of images was threefold.  John of Genoa's late thirteenth-century Catholicon, still a standard dictionary of the period, summarized them in this way:

Know that there were three reasons for the institution of images in churches. First, for the instruction of simple people, because they are instructed by them as if by books. Second, that the mystery of the incarnation and the examples of the Saints may be the more active in our memory through being presented daily to our eyes.  Third, to excite feelings of devotion, these being aroused more effectively by things seen than by things heard.

. . .  If you commute these three reasons for images into instructions for the beholder, it amounts to using pictures as respectively lucid, vivid and readily accessible stimuli to meditation on the Bible and the lives of the Saints.  If you convert them into a brief for the painter, they carry an expectation that the picture should tell its story in a clear way for the simple and in an eye-catching and memorable way for the forgetful, and with full use of all the emotional resources of the sense of sight, the most powerful as well as the most precise of the senses." 

 Michael Baxandall, from Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-century Italy: a primer in the social history of pictorial style (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972)

Palma Vecchio
Young woman in a blue dress
ca. 1512-14
oil on panel
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Palma Vecchio
Portrait of a poet
ca. 1516
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Palma Vecchio
Portrait of blonde woman
ca. 1520
oil on panel
National Gallery, London

Titian
Holy Family with Shepherd
ca. 1510
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Titian
Noli me tangere
ca. 1514
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;
          The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape,
          With fold to fold, of mountain or of cape;
But O too fond, when have I answer'd thee?
                Ask me no more.

Ask me no more: what answer should I give?
          I love not hollow cheek or faded eye:
          Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!
Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live;
                  Ask me no more.

Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are seal'd:
          I strove against the stream and all in vain:
          Let the great river take me to the main:
No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield;
               Ask me no more.

 from The Princess (1847) by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Titian
Madonna and Child with St John the Baptist and female saint or donor
(Aldobrandini Madonna)
ca. 1532
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Titian
Ecce Homo
1543
oil on canvas
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Titian
Vendramin family venerating a relic of the True Cross
ca. 1540-45
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London