Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Arresting Compositions - I

Anonymous British Artist
Don't Keep a Diary
ca. 1942
lithograph (poster)
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Herbert Bayer
Auto-Portrait
1932
gelatin silver print (photomontage)
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Jan Boeckhorst
Apollo and Daphne
ca. 1640
watercolor and gouache
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Brassaï
Graffiti
ca. 1955
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

Günter Brus
Untitled
(series, Night Quartet)
1982
drypoint
Tate Gallery

Claude Cahun
Untitled (Assemblage)
1936
gelatin silver print
Tate Gallery

Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
Sketch for Pietà
ca. 1870
tempera and watercolor on paper
Princeton University Art Museum

Frankie Creith
Garment I
2002
paper, net, gauze - stitched and varnished
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Charles Demuth
In Vaudeville - The Bicycle Rider
1919
drawing, with watercolor
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Herman Faber
Corpse with Wrapped Head and Feet
ca. 1890
drawing
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Marcel Fromenti
Fashion Illustration for The Lady
1953
drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Gaetano Gandolfi
Faun in Landscape bearing Putti on Tray
ca. 1785
drawing
Victoria & Albert Museum, London

Alberto Giacometti
Still Life with Two Plaster Heads
1950
oil on canvas
Milwaukee Art Museum

Great Exhibition (London)
Admission Ticket of W.E. Gladstone
1851
ivory
British Museum

Marsden Hartley
Geometric Figure
ca. 1920
oil on canvas
Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen

      Beyond their official duties within the papal curia and their involvement in the sodalities, humanists also took part in the complex ceremonial and festive life of the Eternal City.  Because of Rome's centrality to Christendom, it offered more opportunities than did other Italian centers for humanistic contributions to ceremonial events, whether in the form of orations, poems, or iconographical programs.  Such occasions for public display showcased humanists' talents.  Thus, they were among those offering sermons before the popes; they delivered orations to cardinals entering conclaves; they delivered funeral orations; and they took part in such pageantry as Alexander VI's celebration of the Jubilee Year (1500), Julius II's triumphal entry into Rome (1507), and Leo X's coronation rites (1513).  Not all such occasions lent themselves to expressions of papal ideology, inasmuch as purpose and context placed constraints upon content.  For example, the Masters of the Sacred Palace, the pope's official theologians, sought to ensure that orations delivered before the popes during the liturgy adhered to strict standards of decorum.  Focusing upon the solemnity being observed, such presentations were not supposed to celebrate the papacy's military or diplomatic successes.  Still, they provided a setting in which humanists could position themselves near the center of the revival of Rome's cultural and intellectual life.  

     Public processions, by contrast, could blazon papal claims and ambitions.  The possesso, the ceremonial procession of a pope-elect from the Piazza San Pietro to the Lateran, included a series of traditional rituals, such as the tossing of coins to the crowd at designated points.  In the coronation of Leo X, however, the focus had shifted decisively to the procession itself, in which music, elaborate costumes, and decorative triumphal arches replete with art and inscriptions gave graphic expression to Roman humanist ideology, associating Leo both with Biblical precedents such as the "Lion of Judah" and with classical gods and goddesses such as Apollo and Athena.  The new pontiff, the arches proclaimed, would initiate a golden age that would flourish particularly in Rome.  Thus, in their programs for ceremonies, as in their formal writings, humanists expressed their shared ideology and, by implication, reinforced their own role as spokesmen whose harmonious voices defined and dignified the Renaissance papacy. 

– Kenneth Gouwens, from Remembering the Renaissance: Humanist Narratives of the Sack of Rome (Brill, 1998)