Delicate, dignified and delightful: carpaccio in washington dc | thearticle
Delicate, dignified and delightful: carpaccio in washington dc | thearticle"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
In the mid-nineteenth century Vittore Carpaccio was admired by Chateaubriand, Théophile Gautier and the Goncourt brothers. Later, John Ruskin declared, “Nothing can be more careful, nothing
more delicately finished, or more dignified in feeling than the works of Carpaccio,” and shaped his modern reputation. Following Ruskin, Henry James in _Italian Hours _described “the
enchanting picture of St. Ursula asleep in her little white bed, in her high clean room, where the angel visits her at dawn; or the noble St. [Augustine], a pearl of sentiment. It unites
the most masterly finish with a kind of universal largeness of feeling.” _Vittore Carpaccio: Master Storyteller to Renaissance Venice_ by Peter Humfrey et al (Yale UP, 340 pp., $65) is a
handsome, lavishly illustrated catalogue for the exhibitions of Carpaccio (1465-1525) at the National Gallery in Washington (November 2022-February 2023) and the Palazzo Ducale in Venice
(March-June 2023) captures the wit, charm, luminous details and linear perfection of the most appealing Venetian painter. Many of Carpaccio’s major works were created for the scuole,
confraternities of devout laity dedicated to Christian saints and sometimes organised by foreigners living in Venice: Germans, Slavs and Albanians. Carpaccio depicts impressive
architectural backgrounds receding into the depths, according to Leon Battista Alberti’s principles of perspective. He includes vivid and often symbolic flowers and trees, birds and
animals. Influenced by his master, Gentile Bellini, Carpaccio’s work contains costumed pageantry, dramatic spectacles and ritual solemnity, enhanced by a sweet melancholy and spiritual
feeling. Individual figures stand out from the crowd, drawing us into the processions. His narrative cycles, such as the _Life of Saint Ursula_, run continuously around the walls of the
chapels like modern motion pictures. _The Martyrdom and the Funeral of St. Ursula_ – Vittore Carpaccio Carpaccio’s _The Departure of Ceyx from Alcyone_, based on a story in Ovid’s
_Metamorphosis_, portrays the Queen begging her husband not to leave on a perilous sea voyage. (When he drowned, she leaped into the sea and they were reunited by the gods, who transformed
them into birds.) The devoted Queen, surrounded by her handmaidens, kneels before the crowned and heavily robed King. He tries to reassure her, as a barge waits to row him to the huge
ship in the harbour. The goldfinch in the foreground foreshadows their aerial reunion. The rather strange _Preparations for Christ__’__s Sepulchre _shows His body between the Deposition
from the Cross and His confinement before the Resurrection. The emaciated, dead Christ, painted in grisaille, is laid out on a long table, above the skulls and bones of five previous
victims. Job mourns Him in a contemplative pose while workmen on the upper left busily construct the cave-like tomb. Tiny figures in the distant lake and mountain landscape seem unaware of
the tremendous event. _Preparations for Christ__’__s Sepulchre_ – Vittore Carpaccio Two secular scenes contrast to the spiritual tragedy. _Fishing and Fowling in the Lagoon_ (Getty Museum,
Los Angeles) shows four long narrow rowboats with 17 men in caps, belted blouses and tights. They use trained black cormorants to catch fish and disgorge their prey when they fly back to
the boats. At the same time, four of the men complete their bounty by leaning over to shoot arrows at ducks floating in the still green water. In the background a V-shaped flock of birds
fly through the clouds and over the hills to safety. Carpaccio’s portrait of _Doge Leonardo Loredan_ portrays him in profile, with small eyes, furrowed cheeks, arched nose and thin lips. He
wears the regal costume of a red-and-gold brocade cape with five large gold buttons, white stringed skullcap and horned ducal hat. This portrait, though fine, is not as impressive as
Giovanni Bellini’s more vivid and incisive full-face portrait of the Doge that reveals his more severe and complex character. _Doge Leonardo Loredan – _Vittore Carpaccio Carpaccio’s five
greatest paintings suggest the pleasures of this exhibition. A contributor notes the extensive travels of Venetian traders: “merchant galleys sailed to the Near East, the Black Sea, the
Barbary Coast [of North Africa], and through the Straits of Gibraltar to France, England and the Low Countries.” The_ Life of Saint Ursula_ cycle, in nine monumental canvases, ranges from
Brittany and England, to Germany and Rome. Carpaccio portrays “the legend of the fifth-century Christian princess of Brittany and her betrothed, the heathen prince of England, as they
undertake a pilgrimage through Italy and northern Europe accompanied by eleven thousand virgins.” The elaborate pictures describe “diplomatic exchanges, ceremonial arrivals and departures,
ritualised encounters, followed by Ursula’s tragic martyrdom [by pagan Huns in Cologne] and triumphant apotheosis.” In _Reception of the Ambassadors _the busy diplomats arrive in the court
of Ursula’s father to ask for her marriage to the English prince. In _Return of the Ambassadors _an elegant figure, who holds a _cartellino_ (little letter) behind his back, subtly conveys
crucial details and the painter’s name. In the right section Ursula tenderly asks her pensive father for permission to marry, after the prince converts to Christianity. _Return of
Ambassadors – _Vittore Carpaccio The ladies in _Two Women on a Balcony_ look like sisters. They have the same features seen in profile: frizzy blonde hair, rouged cheeks, full figures and
bored expressions. One sits up straight, holding a long white scarf, staring into space and doing nothing. The other, with richly brocaded sleeves and deep cleavage, plays with two dogs.
The brown dog pulls at a rope in its snouty mouth; the white dog in a red collar sits up and offers a paw to its mistress. The picture includes four different birds and a decorative vase
with a lily. In a wild swing of interpretations, this painting, once considered to show a pair of Venetian courtesans, now “represents chaste and faithful wives obediently waiting at home
for the return of their husbands,” possibly announced by a young boy who enters with a message. Ruskin called it “the best picture in the world and no other picture can be compared with
it.” _Two Women on a Balcony_ – Vittore Carpaccio In _A Young Knight _the hero is dressed in armour. He carries a striped and sheathed sword, but his legs, clad in red tights, are exposed
and vulnerable from behind. He has long chestnut hair, wears a soft velvet hat, and has gentle and delicate rather than tough martial features. Behind him, his helmeted squire is dressed
in a bright blue-and-yellow checkered costume, rides a horse and carries a lance. A sleek white ermine crawls toward the knight. Deer and cranes stand on the shore of the tranquil lake.
Carpaccio expresses the military spirit in the windswept aerial combat of a falcon and heron, and a vulture consuming the carcass of a duck. _A Young Knight_ – Vittore Carpaccio According to
_The Golden Legend _(a popular collection of late medieval saints’ lives), the city of Silene in Libya had sacrificed many people to a ravenous monster lurking outside its walls. In _Saint
George and the Dragon , _the beast has a curved snakelike tail, muscular haunches, huge spiky wings, defiant taloned claws and a mouth filled with sharp teeth. The handsome golden-haired
armoured knight, on a leaping, richly saddled black horse that turns his head away, thrusts his spear into the mouth and right through the head of the dragon. The ground beneath them is
littered with skulls, bones and grotesquely amputated male and female carcasses, devoured by lizards, snakes, toads and vultures. Castles and pergolas rise in the background, and the high
balconies of domed towers are filled with spectators witnessing the fatal combat. On the right the terrified princess and designated next-victim gives prayerful thanks to her saviour. One
contributor notes that “the theme offered a potent metaphor for the contemporary struggle between the Catholic West and [its perpetual enemy] the Ottoman Empire, with George as the
archetypal Christian soldier triumphing over the monstrous infidel.” _Saint George and the Dragon_ – Vittore Carpaccio Carpaccio’s masterpiece is the exquisitely detailed _Saint Augustine in
His Study,_ perfectly furnished for spiritual contemplation and theological scholarship. The bearded saint—dressed in heavily folded red and white robes and black cape—sits at his desk on
a green platform. He pauses with pen in hand to gaze at the illumination spreading through the tall narrow window and casting shadows on the sand-coloured floor. His desk contains a
seashell, scissors, bell, hourglass and scientific sphere. Three volumes and a scroll of music lie open at his feet. Three astrolabes (models of the universe) hang above him; and high
shelves on the left hold statues, candlesticks and a long row of books. Behind him an open cabinet displays his collection of small treasures. In the centre background his bishop’s crozier
and white mitre rest on the altar, which also displays a tall bronze statue of Christ holding a staff with a fluttering banner. A faithful fluffy white Maltese dog stares attentively at
the saint. Andrew Marvell could have been describing Carpaccio’s _Saint Augustine _when he wrote: “All things are composéd here / Like nature, orderly and near.” _Saint Augustine in His
Study_ – Vittore Carpaccio Jeffrey Meyers, FRSL, has published Painting and the Novel, Impressionist Quartet and Modigliani: A Life. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication
that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue publishing throughout these hard
economic times. So please, make a donation._
Trending News
Video. Danish pm gets the giggles during statement on circus elephantsDenmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen roared with laughter when giving a speech during the parliament session ...
Spatio-temporal variation of male sterile frequencies in two natural populations of beta maritimaABSTRACT The spatio-temporal variation of sex phenotype frequencies is investigated within two gynodioecious populations...
The power at DWP - Los Angeles Times‘Nothing’s going on here,” Board of Water and Power Commissioners President Lee Kanon Alpert insisted at Tuesday’s meeti...
Is this world's first image of real alien? Claims police 'snapped it'POLICE IN ARGENTINA TAKE PHOTOGRAPH OF ALIEN-LIKE BEING The shocking image is sweeping alien and conspiracy theory websi...
Eye on asia | to boost asean’s smart-city dreams, china first needs to build trustChina is the latest nation to pledge support for the Asean Smart City Network, which aims to address the Southeast Asian...
Latests News
Delicate, dignified and delightful: carpaccio in washington dc | thearticleIn the mid-nineteenth century Vittore Carpaccio was admired by Chateaubriand, Théophile Gautier and the Goncourt brother...
Sorry aaradhya, this guy says that he's aishwarya rai bachchan's first-bornA 29-year-old man from Andhra Pradesh, Sangeeth Kumar, claims that Aishwarya is his mother (Image courtesy: Twitter) Ais...
A$ap rocky explores psychedelic nyc in 'jukebox joints' clipRapper wanders through trippy house party, hair salon in clip for Kanye West-co-produced track A$AP Rocky gives a psyche...
Covid-19 vaccines for veterans | st. Croix | va caribbean health care | veterans affairsSan Juan , PR — VA Caribbean Healthcare System (VACHS) offering COVID-19 Vaccine at San Juan VA Medical Center and selec...
Atif aslam drops pictures of daughter haleema on her first birthdayMumbai (Maharashtra) [India], March 24 (ANI): Pakistani singer Atif Aslam, popular for hits like 'Tu Jaane Na,'...