In the Footsteps of Baroque Maestro Caravaggio in Rome

24/01/2020

 

 

Caravaggio en RomaRoberto Taddeo

 

If my last trip to Rome had been a pizza, its top two ingredients would’ve consisted of a great lodging in lovely medieval Trastevere and my route through a number of lovely Baroque churches in search of the Old Masters Caravaggio and Rubens. If you’re an art lover, many of the Eternal City‘s many houses of worship are a bonanza. And one  late-16th- and early 17th-century ruffian called Michelangelo Merisi – better known as the virtuoso realist painter Caravaggio, also noted back in his day for painting everyday life as well as saints and such – may have been quite the sinner but also did quite a few religious commissions for churches and elsewhere. So in addition to finding his work in several key museums, Caravaggio fans can ogle others for free in several Roman churches.

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5b/Michelangelo_Caravaggio_047.jpg/800px-Michelangelo_Caravaggio_047.jpgThe York Project

 

For example, the Contarelli Chapel near the altar of the late-16th-century San Luigi dei Francesi, the national church of France in Rome, located very near the Piazza Navona, is home to a Caravaggio triptych about the calling, the inspiration, and the martyrdom (above) of St. Matthew the Apostle. Executed in 1599 and 1600, these dramatic works never fail to inspire, and they come labelled with helpful explanations on their subject matter (and while you’re in here, also get an eyeful of the marvelous ceiling paintings by French Roccoco master Charles-Joseph Natoire).

 

Rome, Italy - January 9, 2010: Reflection through water of Piazza del Popolo is a town square in the historical center of Rome, Italy. Santa Maria dei Miracoli and Santa Maria di Montesanto are the two churches at Piazza del Popolo. They are often called 'twin' churches because of their similar design. Between churches is entrance to the street Via del Corso which is a main street in the historical center of Rome.ampueroleonardo

 

A 15-minute stroll north of here, the much older (1477) Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo (above) is even more of a trove of Renaissance virtuosity, including Bernini, Bramante, and Raphael. I’d found it closed on a previous trip, so it was a joy to come in and contemplate its imposing interior. And it’s here in the Cerasi Chapel that I found our boy’s Conversion on the Way to Damascus and Crucifixion of St. Peter (top, flanking The Assumption of the Virgin Mary by Bolognese painter Annibale Carraci). Sure, I’d seen them in pictures before, but standing before them in person for a long while, I found myself transfixed by their chiaroscuro, the expression on the faces, and the power of the stories being told.

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2a/Michelangelo_Merisi_da_Caravaggio_-_Sick_Bacchus_-_WGA04072.jpg                      Galleria Borghese

 

Beyond the churches, as a true fan I also didn’t miss the opportunity to visit the Galleria Borghese, the art collection of Cardinal Scipione Borghese housed in his onetime palazzo set amid delightful gardens which begin just a block away from Santa Maria del Popolo. In these opulent rooms, apart from an amazing array of dazzling paintings and sculptures by Bernini, Raphael, Rubens, Titian, and Veronese, I avidly drank in Caravaggio’s Boy with a Basket of Fruit, St. John the Baptist, St. Jerome Writing, and Young Sick Bacchus (above).

 

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ab/Caravaggio_-_La_Deposizione_di_Cristo.jpg                                     Lafit86

 

By the way, two other places to see Caravaggio, by the way, are the art gallery of the Vatican Museums, where The Entombment of Christ (above, 1604) hangs, and the Capitoline Museums, with The Fortune Teller (1594) and St. John the Baptist (Youth with a Ram, 1602).

And of course, along the way I paid proper obeisance to several of Rome’s many other Baroque masters, above all the immortal Michelangelo Buonarroti, for example with a visit to his reknowned statue of Moses, part of the tomb of Pope Julius II in the Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli, located in the Oppian Hill Park in the ancient Monti neighbourhood several blocks north of the Colisseum. For an art lover, this is truly paradise – and furthermore, much of it can be seen for free in its churches. Bellissimo!

 

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