Caravaggio and his Italian, Dutch, Flemish, and French followers working in the wake of his radical naturalism and dramatic use of light in early seventeenth-century painting.

Category: Caravaggio and Caravaggisti

  • Love Conquers All: Caravaggio’s Amor Vincit Omnia in Rome around 1600

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All), c. 1601–1602, Oil on canvas, 156.5 × 113.3 cm, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, on short-term loan to The Wallace Collection, London
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All), c. 1601–1602, Oil on canvas, 156.5 × 113.3 cm, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin, on short-term loan to The Wallace Collection, London

    The collection that Vincenzo Giustiniani (1564–1637) assembled in his Roman palazzo by the early seventeenth century was among the most ambitious in the city: paintings, ancient sculptures, and works of every kind arranged as a cumulative demonstration of a cultivated man’s reach. Giustiniani was not born into Roman elite. His Genoese family had ruled the Aegean island of Chios until the Ottomans seized it in 1566, when he was two years old, and the fortune that funded the collection had been rebuilt through banking.

    Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688), who catalogued the collection in the 1630s and knew itwell, singled out one painting above all others in his Teutsche Academie [The German Academy of the Noble Arts of Architecture, Sculpture and Painting] (1675): a naked laughing boy standing over the scattered instruments of every serious human pursuit.Armour, a crown, a sceptre, a lute, a violin, a sheet of written music, a compass, an astronomical globe, books. On the sheet of music, scholars have noted, a large letter V is visible — whether a reference to Vincenzo or simply a coincidence the patron chose not to correct. The whole project of ordered human endeavour lay at the boy’s feet, and he was grinning.

    The painting was not always called what we call it now. Poets in Giustiniani’s circle responded to it immediately: one wrote three madrigals, another a Latin epigram coupling the work with the Virgilian phrase Omnia vincit Amor, but it was the critic Giovanni Pietro Bellori (1613–1696), writing in his Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architetti moderni (Lives of the Modern Painters, Sculptors and Architects, 1672), who fixed the title in the form that has held ever since.

    The phrase comes from the tenth Eclogue of Virgil (70–19 BC), a lament by the poet Gallus, abandoned by his lover, who concludes in resignation: love conquers all, and there is nothing to be done about it. It is a line of defeat, not celebration. By 1600 it had been absorbed into European learned culture through Andrea Alciato’s (1492–1550) Emblematum liber (Book of Emblems))of 1531, the founding text of the emblem book tradition, which paired Latin epigrams with woodcut images to create a shared symbolic vocabulary across educated European elite, and through Petrarch’s (1304–1374) Trionfi (Triumphs), a sequence of allegorical poems in which Cupid triumphs first over all mortals before being defeated in turn by Chastity, Death, and Time. What Caravaggio does with this inheritance is precise: he takes Virgil’s resignation and makes it a spectacle. The boy is not defeated. He is delighted.

    The modern eye often mistrusts the nude, approaching it in expectation of confession or rupture, as though flesh must reveal a private drama. An eye trained to expect provocation will usually find it. But Caravaggio’s Rome around 1600 looked very differently. In a culture that believed images shaped belief and conduct, clarity was essential and meaning had to be visible. Counter-Reformation sensibility did not fear the body as such. It feared confusion. A naked figure was acceptable when its function was clear and its idea firm. Within such a culture the eye was trained to read before it reacted.

    Allegorical nudity, grounded in the legacy of the classical world and sustained by the emblematic tradition running from Alciato through to Cesare Ripa’s (c.1560–c.1622) Iconologia of 1593, was not excess but a precise visual language. Ripa’s Iconologia was a handbook for artists and patrons that catalogued hundreds of abstract concepts, from virtues to the liberal arts, specifying how each should be dressed, posed, and equipped to be immediately legible; it went through multiple editions in the decades around 1600 and was, in effect, the period’s dictionary of visual ideas. Within that tradition, clothes mark rank, profession, and time, and their absence removes every distinction they establish. The boy stepping over the defeated objects has no allegiance to the categories they represent, because the force he embodies precedes every category.

    Caravaggio does not so much invent a new Cupid as intensify an established concept, and he does so with conspicuous physical particularity. The figure is often identified with Cecco Boneri, Caravaggio’s young studio assistant, though this rests on later sources and stylistic inference rather than documentation, and the tendency to attach names and backstories to every face in Caravaggio’s work has a long history of producing narratives that tell us more about the interpreter’s appetite for biography than about the painting itself. Whatever the model’s identity, the pose is in clear conversation with a recognisable Michelangelesque type: the standing figure, one leg raised, dominating a defeated form below, familiar from the Victory (c.1532–1534, Palazzo Vecchio, Florence) and from the broader currency of Michelangelo’s compositional ideas in Roman artistic culture. Whether Caravaggio had seen the sculpture directly is not documented; what his Roman audience would have recognised is the formula, and the recognition is part of the point. Stripped of rank and circumstance, the figure becomes the clearest possible sign of a force that exceeds every human order, and one that finds the whole arrangement, frankly, rather amusing.

    In 1602, Giovanni Baglione (c. 1566–1643) painted a Divine Love Conquering Earthly Love for Cardinal Benedetto Giustiniani (1554–1621), Vincenzo’s brother and a close partner in building the family collection.That the two brothers between them owned both the original claim and its theological correction tells us the painting had been read clearly enough to require a response. Baglione, stung by what he saw as Caravaggio’s influence over his own composition, went further in a second version and gave the devil Caravaggio’s face. The quarrel that followed was long and vicious, and its afterlife was stranger still: Baglione became Caravaggio’s first biographer, which is perhaps the most elaborate act of revenge the period has to offer. Vincenzo kept both paintings for the rest of his life. The collection he built survived him by nearly two centuries before the wider world caught up with it. When Napoleon’s forces occupied Rome in 1807, the paintings were removed to Paris and broken up. In 1815, Frederick William III of Prussia purchased around 170 of what remained, and they were transferred to Berlin, eventually forming the nucleus of the Gemäldegalerie.



    References

    Danesi Squarzina, S. (2003) La collezione Giustiniani. 2 vols. Turin: Einaudi

    Schütze, S. (2009) Caravaggio: The Complete Works. Cologne: Taschen

    Graham-Dixon, A. (2010)Caravaggio: A Life Sacred and Profane. London: Allen Lane

    Kingsley-Smith, J. (2013) Cupid in Early Modern Literature and Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    Langdon, H. (1998)Caravaggio: A Life. London: Chatto & Windus

    Schütze, S. (2009) Caravaggio: The Complete Works. Cologne: Taschen
    Agus, L. (2022) ‘Ut pictura poësis: the iconography of Caravaggio’s Giustiniani Cupid and classical poetry’, Papireto, 1, pp. 10–31. Available at: https://papireto.accademiadipalermo.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Papireto-1-2022-pp-10-31.pd (Accessed: 23 February 2026).

    Posèq, A.W.G. (1993) ‘Caravaggio’s “Amor Vincitore” and the supremacy of painting’, Notes in the History of Art, 12(4). Available at: https://www.jstor.org/stable/23203376 (Accessed: 23 February 2025)

    Virgil (37 BC) Eclogues, X.69, translated by Lee, G. (1984). Liverpool: Francis Cairns

  • The Measure of Change in Santa Maria del Popolo

    The Measure of Change in Santa Maria del Popolo

    
Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, 1472–1477, Rome, possibly designed by Baccio Pontelli (active c. 1470–1490) and Andrea Bregno (active c. 1460–1503), rebuilt under Pope Sixtus IV  (1414 – 1484)

    Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, 1472–1477, Rome, possibly designed by Baccio Pontelli (active c. 1470–1490) and Andrea Bregno (active c. 1460–1503), rebuilt under Pope Sixtus IV (1414 – 1484)

    Old buildings almost never endure as single, resolved statements. Time will not allow it. They are reworked, broken open, refitted to new purposes, and the line between survival and alteration grows indistinct. What we inherit is a surface of revisions: each century laying down its own syntax upon the remains of the last. The past is legible, but only through interference. The vitality of architecture lies in this slow corrosion of purity, in the way new meanings press against old walls, creating a texture of historical unease. By reading these surfaces closely, one can discern the boundaries between epochs.

    The Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo in Rome embodies this process with exceptional clarity. Its origins are entangled with legend: Pope Paschal II (c. 1050–1118) is said to have founded a chapel on the site in 1099, over the supposed burial place of Nero, where a walnut tree had grown and the emperor’s ghost was believed to linger. The pope ordered the tree felled and a shrine raised in its place, consecrated to the Virgin. The Augustinian friars who were given charge of the church maintained it through the following centuries, but its transformation into a major Roman monument began under Pope Sixtus IV (1414–1484), who commissioned a complete rebuilding between 1472 and 1477. The new church, attributed to the architect Baccio Pontelli (c. 1450–1492), was among the first great expressions of Renaissance order in the city. Its measured proportions, groin vaults, and luminous interior established a language of equilibrium that later patrons continuously redefined.

    Over the following centuries, cardinals and noble families transformed this modestly scaled church into a sequence of private monuments, each reflecting its moment in Roman taste: from Pinturicchio’s quattrocento frescoes and the sculpted classicism of the choir tombs, to Raphael’s harmonious geometry, Caravaggio’s violent illumination, and Bernini’s exuberant ornament. The result is less a unified style than a living archive of artistic dialogue, where successive generations talked back to those who came before.

    The Renaissance chapels preserve the calm geometry of the church’s original conception. The Della Rovere Chapel, commissioned by Cardinal Domenico della Rovere (c. 1442–1501) and painted by Pinturicchio (c. 1454–1513) in the late 1480s, still reflects the lucid linearity and brilliant colour of the early Renaissance. The Costa Chapel, completed around 1505 for the Portuguese Cardinal Jorge da Costa (c. 1406–1508), contains a marble dossal attributed to Gian Cristoforo Romano (c. 1465–1512), a tripartite aedicule framed by Corinthian pilasters and shell-headed niches whose stillness is defined by light rather than shadow. Around the same period, Pope Julius II (1443–1513) commissioned Donato Bramante (1444–1514) to redesign the choir, where Andrea Sansovino (c. 1467–1529) carved the monumental wall tombs of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza (1455–1505) and Cardinal Girolamo Basso della Rovere (1434–1507), their recumbent figures resting within deep arched recesses that draw equally on ancient sarcophagus types and the architectural language of the new church.

    Raphael’s Chigi Chapel, begun in 1513 for the Sienese banker Agostino Chigi (1466–1520), extended this classical balance into a domed, centralised plan uniting sculpture and mosaic, the latter designed by Raphael himself and executed by the Venetian mosaicist Luigi de Pace . Yet Bernini’s completion of the chapel in the 1650s, undertaken for Pope Alexander VII (1599–1667), transformed stillness into movement. His additions, including the dramatically posed figures of Daniel and the Lion and Habakkuk and the Angel, introduced a theatrical energy that pulled the chapel’s restrained geometry into a new register.

    The rupture becomes most vivid in the Cerasi Chapel, where Caravaggio’s Conversion of Saint Paul and Crucifixion of Saint Peter (1600–1601) introduced a pictorial language so immediate that it seemed to violate the calm architecture around it. Commissioned by Tiberio Cerasi (c. 1544–1601), Treasurer General of the Apostolic Chamber, the chapel also houses an altarpiece by Annibale Carracci (1560–1609), whose Assumption of the Virgin occupies a more conventional idealism, and the contrast between the two painters only sharpens what Caravaggio was doing. In his canvases, light explodes from darkness, space collapses into the viewer’s field, and the sacred assumes the texture of the real. One might ask whether contemporaries, raised on the idealised balance of the late Renaissance, grasped the full scale of what had changed, or whether the shock took time to register. Giovanni Baglione (1566–1643), a rival painter and early biographer of Caravaggio, later described his manner as intensely naturalistic and striking in its contrasts of light and dark, acknowledging both its truth and its capacity to unsettle. Baglione’s account, published in his Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architetti (1642) [The Lives of the Painters, Sculptors and Architects: from the Pontificate of Gregory XIII in 1572 to the Times of Pope Urban VIII in 1642], is coloured by personal animosity (the two men had clashed bitterly, including in court), and yet even through that hostility the force of Caravaggio’s achievement is legible.Within the same church that had once embodied composure and harmony, art now demanded confrontation.

    The church remains a microcosm of Rome itself: a city built on renewal, where every act of preservation is also an act of transformation, and where the dialogue between order and invention has never ceased.

    Giovanni di Stefano (active c. 1450–1506), Tomb of Cardinal Pietro Foscari, c. 1480, Marble, Costa Chapel (Chapel of Saint Catherine), Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Giovanni di Stefano (active c. 1450–1506), Tomb of Cardinal Pietro Foscari, c. 1480, Marble, Costa Chapel (Chapel of Saint Catherine), Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Crucifixion of Saint Peter, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Conversion of Saint Paul, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Conversion of Saint Paul, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Conversion of Saint Paul, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Conversion of Saint Paul, 1600–1601, Oil on canvas, 230 × 175 cm, Cerasi Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    
Ercole Antonio Raggi (1624–1686), Cantoria dell’organo (right choir loft), 1656–1657, Marble and gilded wood, after a design by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680), Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Ercole Antonio Raggi (1624–1686), Cantoria dell’organo (right choir loft), 1656–1657, Marble and gilded wood, after a design by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680), Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Bernardino Mei (1612–1676), The Holy Family with Angels and Symbols of the Passion, c. 1658, Oil on canvas, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Bernardino Mei (1612–1676), The Holy Family with Angels and Symbols of the Passion, c. 1658, Oil on canvas, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, 1472–1477, Rome, possibly designed by Baccio Pontelli (active c. 1470–1490) and Andrea Bregno (active c. 1460–1503), rebuilt under Pope Sixtus IV

    Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, 1472–1477, Rome, possibly designed by Baccio Pontelli (active c. 1470–1490) and Andrea Bregno (active c. 1460–1503), rebuilt under Pope Sixtus IV
    Chigi Chapel, the Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Chigi Chapel, the Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Pasquale de’ Rossi (1641–1722), The Baptism of Christ, c.1674, Altarpiece for the Montemirabile Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Pasquale de’ Rossi (1641–1722), The Baptism of Christ, c.1674, Altarpiece for the Montemirabile Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Pinturicchio (c. 1454–1513), Madonna and Child with Saints, 1488–1490, Fresco, Basso Della Rovere Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Pinturicchio (c. 1454–1513), Madonna and Child with Saints, 1488–1490, Fresco, Basso Della Rovere Chapel, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    Leonardo Sormani (active c. 1550–1590), Funeral Monument of Vincenzo Parenzi, c. 1585, Marble, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome

    Leonardo Sormani (active c. 1550–1590), Funeral Monument of Vincenzo Parenzi, c. 1585, Marble, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome
    The Costa Chapel (also known as the Chapel of Saint Catherine), c. 1505, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome.

    The Costa Chapel (also known as the Chapel of Saint Catherine), c. 1505, Basilica of Santa Maria del Popolo, Rome. Commissioned by Cardinal Jorge da Costa (1406–1508), the chapel is situated in the south aisle of the basilica and contains Gian Cristoforo Romano’s marble Dossal of Saint Catherine of Alexandria, framed by Corinthian pilasters and shell-headed niches, along with frescoes attributed to Pinturicchio (c. 1454–1513)

    References

    Blunt, A. (2026) A Guide to Baroque Rome: The Churches. Edited by M. Erwee. 3rd edn. London: Pallas Athene

    Dunlop, A. (2003) ‘Pinturicchio and the pilgrims: devotion and the past at Santa Maria del Popolo’, Papers of the British School at Rome, 71, pp. 259–285.Available at , https://www.jstor.org/stable/i40012730 (Accessed 18 Octobe 2025)

    Murray, C. (2011) Blue Guide Rome. 9th ed. London: A. & C. Black

    Shearman, J. (1961) ‘The Chigi Chapel in S. Maria del Popolo’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 24(3/4), pp. 129–160.Available at, https://www.jstor.org/stable/i230433 (Accessed 18 October 2025)

  • Caravaggio’s Francis and the Condition of Extremity

    Caravaggio’s Francis and the Condition of Extremity


    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Saint Francis in Meditation, 1606, Oil on canvas, 125 × 93 cm, Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Barberini Collection, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Saint Francis in Meditation, 1606, Oil on canvas, 125 × 93 cm, Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Barberini Collection, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Saint Francis in Meditation, 1606, Oil on canvas, 125 × 93 cm, Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Barberini Collection, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Saint Francis in Meditation, 1606, Oil on canvas, 125 × 93 cm, Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Antica, Barberini Collection, Rome

    The evening of 28 May 1606 had been building for some time. Caravaggio and Ranuccio Tomassoni (c. 1580–1606) were not strangers who fell into an argument: the animosity between them was longstanding, rooted in overlapping worlds of money, sex, and honour. Tomassoni was a young Roman man whose livelihood was partly organised around the prostitution trade — his protégée and sometime lover Fillide Melandroni (c. 1581–1618) had been one of Caravaggio’s regular models, the face he gave to the Old Testament’s Judith in the act of beheading Holofernes (Graham-Dixon,2010). Whether the two men were still in competition over Melandroni, or whether the dispute had turned on an unpaid gambling debt, or both, remains unresolved. What the documents confirm is that what happened near the pallacorda courts off the Campo Marzio was not a spontaneous brawl but something closer to a planned confrontation, a formal duel fought with seconds on both sides. Caravaggio was accompanied by his friend and associate the architect Onorio Longhi (c. 1568–1619). Tomassoni was joined by his brother Giovan Francesco and his brothers-in-law. When swords were drawn the fight involved multiple participants.

    Caravaggio wounded Tomassoni in the groin and upper thigh, severing his femoral artery. The location of the wound has led some scholars to suggest an intention to castrate rather than simply kill, since wounds carried meaning in the honour culture of the period: a genital wound marked a dispute over a woman, a facial wound an insult to reputation. Whether that reading is correct, or whether Caravaggio was targeting the largest accessible blood vessel in a sword fight, cannot be determined. What is certain is that the barber-surgeon who examined the body filed a formal relazione, the standard legal document in papal Rome recording wounds as evidence, confirming death from the femoral artery. Tomassoni bled out. Caravaggio, seriously wounded about the head, fled.

    That such detailed records survive is not accidental. Seventeenth-century Rome maintained an elaborate judicial bureaucracy — police logs, notarial records, barber-surgeons’ reports, court depositions — all filed in what is now the Archivio di Stato di Roma. A major archival exhibition in 2011 brought previously unknown documents into scholarly circulation, and Caravaggio’s file was substantial: between 1600 and 1606 he appeared in police records at least fourteen times. He was stopped for carrying a sword and dagger without a permit, arrested for throwing stones at policemen, accused of striking a Vatican notary from behind, sued for libel, and charged with assaulting a waiter who brought him artichokes dressed in butter rather than oil. The criminal record reads partly as comedy and partly as something grimmer. Rome in these years was a city in which street violence was ordinary and personal weapons were routinely carried. Popes periodically attempted to restrict the bearing of arms and largely failed. The question was not whether one went armed but whether one had the correct permit, and for men with patronage connections the permit question could usually be resolved. Cardinal Francesco Maria del Monte (1549–1626) had personally instructed the police that Caravaggio was authorised to carry weapons. The French Ambassador had secured his release in an earlier arrest. The system operated through clientelismo: what mattered was whose household you were associated with and how much trouble your patron was prepared to absorb.

    The killing of Tomassoni was a different order of problem. A death sentence — bando capitale — was issued, authorising anyone who encountered Caravaggio to kill him and collect a reward. Del Monte’s intercessions could not reach this far. The Colonna family could, and did, provide immediate cover. Costanza Colonna (1554–1626), who had administered the Sforza-Colonna interests in the town of Caravaggio in Lombardy since her husband’s death, used her family’s feudal network to shelter the painter in a succession of estates south of Rome — Paliano, Marino, Zagarolo, Palestrina — while managing distractions in the capital. Caravaggio was in the hills, wounded, and carrying the knowledge that he had killed a man whose family and associates would not necessarily wait for the law’s convenience.

    It was in these circumstances, almost certainly during the second half of 1606 while still under Colonna protection near the Aldobrandini estates at Carpineto Romano, that the painting was made. It was found there in 1968, in the church of San Pietro at Carpineto Romano, and attributed to the patronage of the Aldobrandini family, whose estates neighboured the Colonna strongholds where Caravaggio was sheltering. A restoration carried out in 2000, alongside a simultaneous examination of a closely related version at Santa Maria della Concezione in Rome, confirmed the autography of the Barberini canvas through the presence of numerous pentimenti — the revisions buried beneath the paint surface that mark an original working through a composition rather than a copy reproducing one. Even under extreme pressure, Caravaggio thought on the canvas.

    Francis of Assisi (1181/82–1226) was not a subject Caravaggio came to only in 1606. Around 1595, during his years under Del Monte’s protection, he had painted Saint Francis of Assisi in Ecstasy (c. 1595, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford), an early and unusually tender work in which the saint, apparently unconscious, is supported by an oversized angel who steadies his body with something close to tenderness. That painting belongs to the register of supernatural encounter: the divine has arrived, the saint has been overwhelmed by it, and the event is the painting’s subject. Orazio Gentileschi (1563–1639) would testify in a 1603 libel trial that he had lent Caravaggio a monk’s robe and a pair of wings — the robe for a Francis, the wings for an angel — placing the two men’s studios in close conversation around Franciscan imagery in the early years of the century.

    The 1606 Barberini painting removes the angel entirely. No wings, no supernatural encounter, no event. Francis kneels alone, his battered Franciscan habit marking the voluntary poverty of a man who has stripped himself of everything the world offers, and holds a skull with a concentration that is wholly interior. A crucifix lies below his hands, painted in sharp foreshortening, angled acutely toward the viewer and cut off by the picture frame as though the image has arrived mid-thought. A barely indicated rocky setting registers in the darkness to the left. A cypress tree, just visible, echoes the tree in the Corsini John the Baptist — a quiet compositional rhyme. Otherwise almost nothing. The darkness is not a backdrop but the painting’s condition: Francis emerges from it partially, the right cheek and the creased brow lit with particular care, as though Caravaggio has illuminated only what the meditation strictly requires.

    The iconographic tradition Caravaggio enters with this work had been accumulating for three centuries. Francis was one of the most extensively represented saints of the Counter-Reformation, and for specific reasons. The Tridentine programme emphasised voluntary poverty, the imitation of Christ, and the physical lives of the saints as models of devotional discipline. Francis met all three requirements, and more: he had received the stigmata on La Verna in 1224, making him uniquely the alter Christus, the saint who bore Christ’s wounds in his own flesh rather than merely in image. The Church had at its disposal three standard pictorial formulas for the subject. The stigmatisation showed the supernatural event itself, Francis extending toward a seraph as the wounds arrived in fire or light. The ecstasy showed its aftermath, the saint swooning or unconscious, supported by an angel. The meditation showed the saint alone with a skull, a crucifix, or both, in the Hieronymite-Franciscan tradition of meditatio mortis — the deliberate contemplation of death as preparation for prayer and moral clarity.

    Caravaggio had used the ecstasy formula in 1595 and now turned to the meditation. What he does with it is characteristically reductive. He removes every element the formula had accumulated through two centuries of workshop elaboration and leaves only what the image strictly requires: a man, a skull, and a cross. The skull is the memento mori, the object around which Franciscan and Jesuit devotional practice organised the individual’s confrontation with mortality. The crucifix at Francis’s feet carries a further charge: in the Gethsemane scene, Christ prays before the chalice, the symbol of the suffering he is about to undergo. Francis prays before the skull, the symbol of the death that his imitation of Christ demands. The visual parallel is exact and requires no theological annotation. The two objects — skull and cross — occupy the foreground in sharp focus while Francis’s face retreats toward darkness, which reverses the usual hierarchy of devotional painting, where the saint’s expression carries the image’s emotional weight. Here the meaning is distributed between the saint and the objects, and the viewer is placed in the same position as Francis, looking down at mortality from above.

    In M: The Man Who Became Caravaggio, Peter Robb observed that Francis, alongside John the Baptist and Saint Jerome, forms a recurring trio in Caravaggio’s work, each a solitary male, young, mature, and old respectively, withdrawn from society into a condition of extremity.The observation carries weight as long as one does not reduce it to autobiography. Caravaggio returned to these subjects not simply because they mirrored his circumstances but because they gave him the formal conditions he most valued: a single figure, minimal setting, concentrated light, and an object or gesture on which the image’s entire argument rests. The Saint Francis in Meditation is an extreme version of this tendency. The composition is among the most austere things he ever produced, and it was produced in the most exposed circumstances of his life. Whether the correspondence between the painting’s stripping-away and the painter’s situation is causal or coincidental, both are operating at the same register of reduction. What remains when everything is removed is the question the painting poses, and it poses it without sentimentality or resolution.

    References

    Langdon, H. (1998) Caravaggio: A Life. London: Chatto and Windus

    Robb, P. (1998) M: The Man Who Became Caravaggio. Sydney: Duffy and Snellgrove

    Graham-Dixon, A. (2010) Caravaggio: A Life Sacred and Profane. London: Allen Lane

    Hibbard, H. (1983) Caravaggio. New York: Harper and Row

    Spike, J.T. (2001) Caravaggio. New York: Abbeville Press.

    Schütze, S. (ed.) (2009) Caravaggio and His Circle in Rome. Exhibition catalogue. Munich: Hirmer

  • Valentin de Boulogne: The Most Passionate of Caravaggio’s Heirs


    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City

    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City

    On a hot Roman night in August 1632, after an evening of wine and tobacco in one of the taverns he had frequented for years, a French painter threw himself into the Fontana del Babuino to cool down. The shock of the cold water brought on a fever from which he never recovered. Giovanni Baglione (1566–1643), who recorded the episode in his Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architettori [The Lives of the Painters, Sculptors, and Architects] (1642), could not resist the narrative symmetry: a man whose paintings were full of card sharps, drinkers, and low-lit gambling dens dying in a manner that seemed to confirm everything his pictures had already told us. Valentin de Boulogne was forty-one. He left no money for a funeral. Cassiano dal Pozzo (1588–1657), secretary to Cardinal Francesco Barberini (1597–1679) and one of Rome’s shrewdest collectors, paid for the burial. That a man of dal Pozzo’s standing would cover the costs tells us something important about how Valentin was regarded in Rome, even by those who moved in circles far removed from the tavern.

    Valentin had arrived in the city probably around 1613 or 1614, according to the testimony of Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688), the German painter, engraver, and art historian whose Teutsche Academie der edlen Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste [German Academy of the Noble Arts of Architecture, Sculpture, and Painting] (1675–1679) remains one of the most important primary sources for seventeenth-century artistic biographies. Sandrart knew Valentin personally during his own years in Rome, which gives his account particular weight, though the first secure documentary trace dates only to 1620, when Valentin appeared in the census of the Santa Maria del Popolo parish (Lemoine and Christiansen, 2016). By that time Caravaggio (1571–1610) had been dead a decade, but his example still structured the ambitions and quarrels of painters working in Rome. Valentin absorbed the Caravaggesque manner less through direct contact with the master, who had fled the city in 1606 and died in 1610, than through intermediaries, above all Bartolomeo Manfredi (1582–1622), whose so-called Methodus [Method] (the practice of staging half-length genre and narrative scenes under controlled raking light, painted directly from posed models without preparatory drawing) offered a workable grammar for the next generation caravaggists. In 1624 Valentin joined the Schildersbent [Band of Bent Ones], the loose fraternity of northern and foreign artists in Rome, where he received the nickname ‘Amador’ (Lemoine and Christiansen, 2016). He was, in other words, embedded in the bohemian life of the foreign painters’ quarter, not in the official structures of the Accademia di San Luca. That he would eventually receive one of the most prestigious altarpiece commissions in Christendom is therefore all the more remarkable.

    One of the most influential Italian art historians of the 20th century, Roberto Longhi, writing in 1935, called Valentin ‘the most energetic and passionate of Caravaggio’s naturalist followers’, while chiding French scholars for having neglected him (cited in Christiansen, 2016, p. 3). It took nearly four decades before the challenge was taken up, first by Arnauld Brejon de Lavergnée and Jean-Pierre Cuzin in their landmark 1973 exhibition Valentin et les Caravagesques français at the Grand Palais, and then, more comprehensively, by Annick Lemoine and Keith Christiansen in the 2016 Metropolitan Museum exhibition and catalogue Valentin de Boulogne: Beyond Caravaggio. The recovery has been very slow. For much of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Valentin’s reputation was overshadowed by the classicist turn that followed his death, and his name remained far less familiar to a general public than those of Caravaggio or Georges de La Tour (1593–1652). What sets him apart from most Caravaggisti, however, is a quality harder to name than chiaroscuro technique or tenebrism: a kind of interior gravity, a melancholy that inhabits the figures themselves rather than being imposed on them by dramatic lighting alone. His religious paintings hold the viewer with an almost physical insistence. In the Crowning with Thorns (c. 1616–17, Alte Pinakothek, Munich), soldiers in contemporary dress go about their cruelty with a distracted ordinariness, while Christ retreats into a stillness so complete that the brutality around him registers all the more sharply. The Judith and Holofernes (c. 1626–28, Musée des Augustins, Toulouse) gives us a woman who looks as though she has just understood the full weight of what her hands are doing. The Samson (c. 1631, Cleveland Museum of Art), which appears to contain a self-portrait, catches its hero not in triumph but in the stunned pause afterwards, leaning on his improvised weapon as if the mind has not yet absorbed what the hands have done. In each case, Valentin finds the moment where action tips into private reckoning, and it is this that pins the viewer in place. His genre scenes work in a comparable register. The fortune tellers, card players, and tavern musicians who fill canvases like the Concert with a Bas-Relief (c. 1624–26, Musée du Louvre, Paris) do not simply depict low life as spectacle. There is something withdrawn and inward about the faces, a sadness that seeps through the candlelight, and a psychological weight that makes the viewer feel implicated rather than entertained.

    The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian was commissioned by Cardinal Francesco Barberini, nephew of Pope Urban VIII (1568–1644), for an altar in the right transept of St Peter’s Basilica, and was completed by 1630. Valentin was paid the considerable sum of 350 crowns (Lemoine and Christiansen, 2016). The commission placed a tavern painter, as his detractors might have called him, at the spiritual centre of Catholic Europe, and it did so at a moment when the decoration of the new basilica was itself a battleground between competing artistic ideologies. Nicolas Poussin (1594–1665), Valentin’s compatriot and near-contemporary, received a parallel commission for a neighbouring altar: The Martyrdom of Saint Erasmus (1628–29, Pinacoteca Vaticana). The two works hung side by side, and contemporaries treated them as a direct contest between naturalism and classicism, between the primacy of colour and the primacy of disegno [drawing]. We are told that connoisseurs judged them equal, though taste would shift decisively in Poussin’s direction after Valentin’s death (Lemoine and Christiansen, 2016).

    The subject itself is drawn from early Christian hagiography. Processus and Martinian were, according to a legend recorded since the sixth century, soldiers of the Praetorian Guard assigned to watch over Saints Peter and Paul in the Mamertine Prison. The apostles converted their jailers after Peter caused a miraculous spring to flow from the prison floor, and the two were baptised in its waters. Refusing subsequently to sacrifice to Jupiter, they were arrested, tortured, and beheaded under the emperor Nero (37–68 AD). The Roman noblewoman Lucina is said to have buried them in her own cemetery. Their relics were later translated to St Peter’s, making the subject an obvious choice for an altarpiece in the basilica that housed them.

    Valentin packs twelve figures into a tall, compressed vertical format, and the effect is deliberately suffocating. The two martyrs are stretched on the rack in the lower portion of the canvas, their bodies taut with pain, while their tormentors crowd around them with ropes and instruments. At upper left, an altar to Jupiter signals the idolatry they have refused. At right, the commanding officer clutches his eye, blinded by divine retribution. The hooded figure of Lucina, pressing close to the martyrs, urges constancy. And from the upper register, an angel tumbles headlong out of heaven bearing the palm of martyrdom, an irruption of the supernatural into what is otherwise an almost forensically observed scene of violence.

    What makes the painting so arresting is its refusal to aestheticise suffering. Where Poussin’s Saint Erasmus, for all its horror, arranges the torment with a certain balletic composure, framing the body within a legible classical structure, Valentin gives us bodies that look as though they have been hauled in from the street. The musculature is specific, the skin tones uneven, the expressions caught somewhere between endurance and collapse. The executioners do not perform their cruelty with operatic relish; they go about it with a workaday heaviness that feels more brutal for being so ordinary. There is no compositional breathing room, no passage of sky or architecture that might offer relief. The figures press against one another and against the edges of the canvas as though the painting itself is a confined space.

    Christiansen has argued that in this work Valentin achieved ‘a Caravaggesque interpretation of classicism’, and that therein lies his legacy for French painting (Christiansen, 2016, p. 28). The remark is well judged. Valentin did not abandon Caravaggio’s insistence on painting from life, on using real bodies with real imperfections, but he organised them with a structural ambition that goes beyond anything in Caravaggio’s own altarpieces. The diagonal thrust of the composition, the stacking of figures into a dense pyramidal arrangement, owes something to the study of Raphael (1483–1520) and the Roman High Renaissance tradition that Caravaggio himself had conspicuously rejected. Valentin, in a sense, found a way to reconcile the two great Roman traditions without surrendering either. The bodies remain stubbornly individual, fleshly, resistant to idealisation, but the composition holds them in a formal order that commands the scale and gravity of a major altarpiece.

    Could this reconciliation have developed further had Valentin lived? That question haunts the painting. Jean Lemaire (c. 1598–1659), a fellow French painter in Rome, wrote shortly after Valentin’s death: ‘We have lost Valentin, who died about three or four weeks ago. His paintings can no longer be found or if one does find them, it is necessary to pay four or more times their value’ (cited in Lemoine, 2016). The market responded to the loss immediately, which suggests that Roman collectors understood, even in 1632, that something irreplaceable had gone. About eighty paintings are now attributed to Valentin, and the attribution history is tangled, as it is for most Caravaggisti: works have moved between Valentin, Manfredi, Nicolas Tournier (1590–1639), and Nicolas Régnier (1591–1667) across centuries of connoisseurship. The Vatican altarpiece, however, has never been seriously doubted. It is securely documented through the Barberini commission, and its condition, though it has suffered from the translation to mosaic copy that replaced it in the basilica (the original was moved to the Pinacoteca Vaticana), remains strong enough to demonstrate the richness and warmth of Valentin’s palette, which contemporaries agreed exceeded Poussin’s in naturalism, force, and harmonic colour.

    The painting sits oddly in the Vatican collections, surrounded by works that tend toward the polished and the idealised. It has the feeling of something that has forced its way in from a rougher world, which is precisely what happened. A French outsider, dwelled in taverns and tenement studios, placed his most ambitious work at the heart of the church. And then, within two years, he was dead.


    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City
    Valentin de Boulogne (1591–1632), The Martyrdom of Saints Processus and Martinian, c. 1629, Oil on canvas, 302 × 192 cm, Pinacoteca Vaticana, Vatican City


    References

    Baglione, G. (1642) Le vite de’ pittori, scultori et architettori [The Lives of the Painters, Sculptors, and Architects]. Rome: Andrea Fei. Available at: https://archive.org/details/gri_vitedepittor00bagl/page/n7/mode/2up (Accessed: 16 October 2025).

    Brejon de Lavergnée, A. and Cuzin, J.-P. (1974) Valentin et les Caravagesques français [Valentin and the French Caravaggisti] [Exhibition catalogue]. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux

    Christiansen, K. (2016) ‘Painting from Life: Valentin and the Legacy of Caravaggio’, in Lemoine, A. and Christiansen, K. (eds.) Valentin de Boulogne: Beyond Caravaggio. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, pp. 3–28.

    Conisbee, P. and Gage, F. (2009) French Paintings of the Fifteenth through the Eighteenth Century. The Collections of the National Gallery of Art Systematic Catalogue. Washington, D.C.: National Gallery of Art, pp. 413–414.

    Lemoine, A. and Christiansen, K. (eds.) (2016) Valentin de Boulogne: Beyond Caravaggio. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Distributed by Yale University Press

    Longhi, R. (1935) ‘I pittori della realtà in Francia’ [The Painters of Reality in France], L’Italia Letteraria, cited in Christiansen (2016), p. 3.

    Pinacoteca Vaticana (n.d.) Valentin de Boulogne, Martyrdom of St Processo and St Martiniano. Available at: https://www.museivaticani.va/content/museivaticani/en/collezioni/musei/la-pinacoteca/sala-xii—secolo-xvii/jean-valentin–martirio-dei-ss–processo-e-martiniano.html (Accessed: 16 October 2026).

    Sandrart, J. von (1675–1679) Teutsche Academie der edlen Bau-, Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste [German Academy of the Noble Arts of Architecture, Sculpture, and Painting]. Nuremberg. Available at: https://archive.org/details/gri_joachimidesa00c2sa/page/n1/mode/2up (Accessed: 16 October 2025).

  • Caravaggio’s Magdalene: The Woman Who Sat for a Saint

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    Caravaggio’s early Roman circle was a tight knot of poverty, ambition, and precarious alliances, and Penitent Magdalene is inseparable from that human world. The figure’s lowered head, bruised realism, and unidealised posture signal the lived reality of the women who sat for him. Several early modern documents place the courtesan Anna Bianchini within his orbit at precisely the moment this painting was made. Scholars tracing her movements through judicial records and brothel registries have suggested that her distinctive features—pale complexion, heavy eyelids, reddish hair—correspond to the Magdalene. Another version identifies Fillide Melandroni (1581–1618), a celebrated and notoriously sharp-witted courtesan who sat for several of his works, although her bolder character seems at odds with the subdued tone of this painting. A further, more cautious hypothesis treats the model as an unnamed girl from the same Roman quarter, someone Caravaggio encountered in the cramped lodgings and low taverns where he lived and worked in the mid-1590s.

    What unites these theories is the social proximity between artist and sitter. Caravaggio knew these women not as distant allegories but as neighbours, lovers, quarrelling companions, and occasional witnesses to his volatility. He relied on them for the plain fact of their presence: people who would sit still for long hours, tolerate his unpredictable moods, and bring into his studio the marks, gestures, and emotional textures that made his sacred figures so arrestingly human. Whether the Magdalene was Bianchini, Fillide, or another woman from the same world, the painting registers the charged intimacy of those early Roman years, when Caravaggio’s art and his personal entanglements were inseparable.

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), Penitent Magdalene, c. 1594–1595, Oil on canvas, 122 × 98 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    References

    Graham-Dixon, A. (2010) Caravaggio: A Life Sacred and Profane. London: Allen Lane.


  • Caravaggio’s Angel Playing from a Netherlandish-Burgundian Score

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610) was born in Milan, where his father Fermo Merisi served as household administrator and architect-decorator to Francesco Sforza (1550–1583), Marchese of Caravaggio. His mother, Lucia Aratori, came from a propertied family of the same Lombard district, and the connection between the Merisi and the Sforza household ran deeper than Fermo’s employment alone: Francesco Sforza had attended the wedding of Caravaggio’s parents, which gives some indication of how closely the two families were bound. Lucia’s sister, Margherita Aratori, served as wet nurse to the children of Francesco Sforza and his wife Costanza Colonna (1556–1626), which drew the Aratori family into an intimate proximity with one of the most powerful dynastic alliances in northern Italy, the Colonna being ancient Roman nobility allied by marriage to the Sforza and well connected to the Spanish Habsburg administration that had controlled the Duchy of Milan since 1535. It was a connection the Merisi family did not need in the relative stability of Caravaggio’s childhood, but would prove indispensable later.

    When plague reached Milan in 1576 the family retreated to the town of Caravaggio, and within a year Fermo Merisi was dead, along with Caravaggio’s uncle, grandmother, and grandfather. Lucia Aratori survived and raised her children alone in reduced circumstances, maintaining whatever she could of the family’s connections to the Sforza household and its network. She did not live to see her son leave for Milan: she died in 1584, when Caravaggio was thirteen, leaving him an orphan with a modest inheritance and no immediate household to return to. That same year he was apprenticed to the Milanese painter Simone Peterzano (c.1535–c.1599), described in the contract of apprenticeship as a pupil of Titian (c.1488–1576) — a claim that carried as much commercial weight as biographical accuracy, but which reflects the Venetian current in Peterzano’s training that Caravaggio would later absorb into his own handling of light and surface. After completing his apprenticeship he appears to have remained in the Milan-Caravaggio area for some years, possibly with a period in Venice, before arriving in Rome around 1592.

    He arrived without money, without a fixed lodging, and without a patron, and spent the better part of three years in genuine poverty, working for picture dealers and producing small devotional canvases before he came to the attention of Cardinal Francesco Maria del Monte (1549–1627). It was through a picture dealer near San Luigi dei Francesi — close to Del Monte’s Palazzo Madama — that Caravaggio manoeuvred himself into the cardinal’s view, painting two small genre scenes calculated to attract a wealthy collector. Del Monte was a Venetian by birth, of Tuscan aristocratic stock, diplomat for the Grand Duke of Tuscany, protector of the Sistine Chapel Choir, and one of the most intellectually ambitious patrons in Rome, whose household at the Palazzo Madama functioned as one of the city’s most active intellectual salons, frequented by scientists, musicians, painters, and men of letters. He recognised something exceptional in the two small paintings, took Caravaggio into his household around 1595, and gave him accommodation, materials, and a series of commissions. It was the arrangement that rescued Caravaggio’s career before it had properly found its footing, and it shaped the kind of painter he became far more thoroughly than his Lombard apprenticeship had done. The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, painted at around 1597, is one of the works in which the full consequences of that arrangement are most legible, and the least examined of them is the music.

    The painting’s commission remains contested. The early biographer Giulio Mancini recorded that it was made for a Monsignor Fantino Petrignani, with whom Caravaggio had lodged before entering Del Monte’s household, but the dates do not align comfortably with that account. Helen Langdon and Peter Robb, writing independently in 1998, raised the more persuasive possibility that the work was made for Del Monte himself, noting that the sophistication of its musical content is precisely what one would expect of a commission shaped by that cardinal’s intellectual tastes and personal enthusiasms (Langdon 1998; Robb 1998). A further candidate, proposed by other scholars, is Girolamo Vittrice, who also commissioned the Deposition now in the Vatican Museums; according to this account the painting was sold after Vittrice’s death to Camillo Pamphilj (1622–1666), which would explain its presence in the Doria Pamphilj collection (Graham-Dixon 2010). The question of who originally ordered the work matters because, whichever account one accepts, the painting was not made speculatively. This was the first large-scale canvas of Caravaggio’s career — a work of considerable compositional ambition, executed on a Flemish canvas that laboratory analysis has since shown was of the kind ordinarily used in the sixteenth century for tablecloths rather than for painting — and it was made for someone who expected, and could read, exactly the kind of learned musical reference that lies at its centre.

    What that reference is, and what it means within the painting, was only established in 1983, when Franca Trinchieri Camiz and Agostino Ziino identified the score that the angel holds open before the seated Joseph as the motet Quam pulchra es [How beautiful you are] by the Franco-Flemish composer Noël Bauldeweyn (c.1480–c.1530), first published in Venice by Ottaviano Petrucci (1466–1539) in 1519 in the fourth volume of his Motetti de la corona [Motets of the Crown] (Camiz and Ziino 1983). The motet sets verses from Chapter 7 of the Song of Songs — Quam pulchra es et quam decora, / Assimilata es palmae / et ubera tua botris [How beautiful you are, how fair, / you are like a palm tree / and your breasts are like clusters of grapes] — a text whose erotic imagery had for centuries been interpreted within Catholic exegesis as an allegory of the Virgin Mary, the beloved of the Song understood as a figure for the Mother of God. The choice of this specific motet transforms what might otherwise read as a tender genre scene into a carefully structured theological argument: the angel is not simply playing something beautiful to send Mary and the Christ child to sleep, but is performing a song of praise addressed to Mary herself, in her presence, while she sleeps unknowing. The music is simultaneously lullaby and hymn, and the distinction between the two is precisely what gives the painting its particular kind of quiet intelligence.

    Bauldeweyn is not a composer who appears in most general accounts of the period, but his Quam pulchra es occupied a significant place within the wider polyphonic tradition. Working in the generation immediately after Josquin Desprez (c.1450–1521), Bauldeweyn’s Missa Da pacem was so widely admired that it was attributed to Josquin himself well into the twentieth century. The Quam pulchra es motet was republished in Nuremberg as late as 1546, nearly thirty years after its first appearance, and a parody mass on it was composed by Nicolas Gombert (c.1495–c.1560), which signals the esteem in which the motet was held by the next generation of composers. That Caravaggio, or his patron, chose a work from the Netherlandish-Burgundian polyphonic tradition rather than any Italian or Roman contemporary composition is itself a pointed decision. By the late 1590s, the musical world in which Del Monte was so deeply invested was in the process of a fundamental transformation, and the choice of Bauldeweyn’s motet — composed perhaps eighty years earlier, in a tradition that was giving way to something entirely new — places the painting at an interesting angle to that transition.

    Del Monte’s musical world in the 1590s was defined by the tension between two ways of thinking about what music was for. The dominant tradition that had shaped Roman sacred music for the better part of the century was Flemish polyphony, in which multiple voices wove together in complex counterpoint to create what contemporaries described as an otherworldly sound, the individual voice dissolving into the fabric of the whole. Del Monte, as protector of the Sistine Chapel Choir, was an institutional custodian of this tradition. But he was simultaneously one of the most avid advocates of the emerging practice of monody — the single melodic line sung by the solo voice, accompanied only by a continuo instrument — whose proponents argued that polyphony had sacrificed intelligibility and emotional directness in the pursuit of contrapuntal complexity. This was not a merely technical dispute: it carried within it a broader argument about whether music should move the listener through overwhelming collective sound or through the intimate communication of a single expressive voice. The monodic experiments of the Florentine Camerata, a circle of humanists and musicians with close connections to Del Monte’s Medici network, were already in circulation, and would within a decade produce the first operas. Del Monte’s Palazzo Madama sat at the crossroads of these two worlds, and Caravaggio, living there, was immersed in both.

    Against this background, the choice of Bauldeweyn’s polyphonic motet acquires a retrospective quality that seems deliberate. The score that Joseph holds open and that the angel performs on the viol belongs to an older form, one associated with the chapels and courts of the Burgundian north rather than with the reformed liturgical culture of post-Tridentine Rome or the experimental salons of the Florentine Camerata. There is something specifically Netherlandish about the gesture — the score itself, readable enough that scholars could identify it nearly four centuries later, functions as an object of humanistic erudition within the painting, the kind of precise musical reference that circulated among collectors who owned Flemish panel paintings alongside Italian ones and who understood music as a branch of learned culture rather than merely as entertainment. Whether Caravaggio himself understood the full weight of the reference, or was guided by a patron or adviser who did, is a question the sources do not resolve; but the painting could not have taken its present form without someone in the transaction knowing exactly what Bauldeweyn’s motet meant and how it spoke to the image of Mary asleep with her child.

    What Caravaggio makes of all this, pictorially, is something that no amount of musical annotation fully explains. The angel — a boy of perhaps sixteen, barefoot, one wing folded and one slightly open, wearing a white garment that slides from one shoulder — stands with his back to the viewer and his front to Joseph, playing from the score that the old man holds up with the quiet concentration of someone who has been asked to do this and is doing it carefully. The pose of the figure has been connected to that of the allegorical Vice in Annibale Carracci’s (1560–1609) Choice of Hercules, completed early in 1596 and widely discussed in Rome; if Caravaggio borrowed the pose, he transformed it entirely, removing whatever erotic ambiguity attached to its original context and replacing it with something altogether more still. Joseph sits to the left, his eyes on the score, his body frail and slightly hunched, a man performing an act of service that is also an act of faith. Mary, on the right, has fallen asleep against the Christ child, her face tipped down, completely absent from the transaction between the angel and her husband. She is the subject of the music but not its audience. The painting turns on that irony: the hymn of praise is addressed to someone who cannot hear it, and its beauty exists for the viewer rather than for the person it celebrates.

    This is an unusual painting in Caravaggio’s output in several respects beyond the music. It is one of his very few works that include a genuine landscape, the open fields and distant sky behind the figures one of the rare occasions on which he allowed his scenes to breathe outdoor air. The canvas itself, laboratory analysis has revealed, is Flemish in origin — a type of cloth ordinarily used in the sixteenth century for tablecloths rather than for painting — which some scholars have taken as evidence of financial constraint at the time of execution, though it may equally reflect the availability of materials within a household that maintained extensive Netherlandish connections. Either way, the material substrate of the painting bears its own quiet relationship to the musical score depicted within it: both the canvas and the motet come from north of the Alps, and both were carried into a Roman context where they were put to uses their original makers had not anticipated.

    The Rest on the Flight into Egypt is, among other things, a painting about the relationship between music and image, and about what each can do that the other cannot. Music moves in time; painting arrests it. The angel in Caravaggio’s canvas is caught in the act of playing a note that the viewer will never hear, holding a score that can be read but not sounded, performing a hymn of praise to a woman who has fallen asleep. The painting does not resolve that tension so much as dwell in it, which is perhaps why it has attracted the kind of close attention that most of Caravaggio’s more obviously dramatic works do not.

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome
    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (1571–1610), The Rest on the Flight into Egypt, c. 1597, Oil on canvas, 135.5 × 166.5 cm, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome

    References

    Graham-Dixon, A. (2010) Caravaggio: A Life Sacred and Profane. London: Allen Lane

    Langdon, H. (1998) Caravaggio: A Life. London: Chatto and Windus

    Robb, P. (1998) M: The Caravaggio Enigma. London: Bloomsbury

    Spike, J.T. (2010) Caravaggio. 2nd edn. New York: Abbeville Press

    Trinchieri Camiz, F. (1991) ‘Music and painting in Cardinal del Monte’s household’, Metropolitan Museum Journal, 26, pp. 213–226. Available at: https://resources.metmuseum.org/resources/metpublications/pdf/Music_and_Painting_in_Cardinal_del_Montes_Household_The_Metropolitan_Museum_Journal_v_26_1991.pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2025)

    Trinchieri Camiz, F. (1991) ‘Music and painting in Cardinal del Monte’s household’, Metropolitan Museum Journal, 26, pp. 213–226. Available at: https://cdn.sanity.io/files/cctd4ker/production/0e643de368a9a945df4fb37eec164ecbd4e40b1a.pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2025).

    Thalmann, F. (2014) ‘Irony, ambiguity, and musical experience in Caravaggio’s musical paintings’, Academia.edu. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/9488015/Irony_Ambiguity_and_Musical_Experience_in_Caravaggios_Musical_Paintings (Accessed: 14 October 2025).

  • Witness in the Dark: Gerrit van Honthorst’s Christ before the High Priest and the Language of the Nocturne

    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London (displayed on the wall to the right of Caravaggio’s Supper at Emmaus, 1601)

    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London (displayed on the wall to the right of Caravaggio’s Supper at Emmaus, 1601)

    When Gerrit van Honthorst painted Christ before the High Priest around 1617, he was a young northerner in Rome, still finding his artistic voice.

    The composition is stripped to its essentials: Christ, calm and radiant, stands before his judge, the High Priest, who sits at a table with an open book, his hand raised, finger pointed upward in a gesture of authority. All else recedes into shadow. There is no architecture, no decoration, only the bare encounter, staged in darkness, with a single flame illuminating the drama.

    It is tempting to read this as a straightforward echo of Caravaggio, but such a view flattens the painting’s complexity. Honthorst’s nocturne is part of a much broader history that reaches back into the sixteenth century, when many artists in different regions explored darkness as a way of heightening the mystery of the sacred. In Venice, Tintoretto (1518–1594) often staged biblical scenes by torchlight, while Jacopo Bassano (c.1510–1592) and his workshop developed entire cycles of night narratives filled with firelight. In Lombardy, Giovanni Girolamo Savoldo (c.1480–after 1548) and Moretto da Brescia (c.1498–1554) experimented with twilight and subdued tonalities, letting forms emerge gently from the half-light to create devotional intimacy. In Genoa, Luca Cambiaso (1527–1585) pushed simplification further still, carving his figures into block-like forms and abandoning ornament and architecture altogether. These diverse explorations formed a rich backdrop for the tenebrism of the early seventeenth century, and they remind us that Caravaggio was part of a larger trajectory rather than a solitary innovator.

    The link to Cambiaso is especially significant for Honthorst. His patron for Christ before the High Priest was Vincenzo Giustiniani (1564–1637), a Genoese nobleman and banker who settled in Rome and built one of the most celebrated collections of the age. Giustiniani was one of Caravaggio’s most important early supporters, but he also cherished his Genoese inheritance. Among his possessions was Cambiaso’s own Christ before Caiaphas, painted decades earlier. By commissioning Honthorst to treat the same subject, Giustiniani invited the young northern painter to engage directly with both Cambiaso’s Genoese precedent and Caravaggio’s Roman legacy. The painting is thus not an isolated exercise but a dialogue across traditions, with Genoa’s genius, Rome’s radical naturalism, and Utrecht’s ambitions converging in a single nocturne.

    The theology of the image gives this convergence its weight. Darkness is never neutral in Christian thought: it conceals and reveals, offering a visual language for mystery itself. The candlelight falls on Christ’s face, serene and composed, identifying him as the true light of the world. Opposite him the High Priest sits with an open book, his right hand raised, finger pointed upward. It is the gesture of the judge and the teacher, the sign of pronouncement and authority, recalling both ancient oratory and the traditional pose of preachers. Yet here the meaning is deeply ironic: Caiaphas raises his finger as if invoking higher law, but in truth he misjudges the one who is the fulfilment of the law. The gesture is thus a mark of blindness, an empty claim to authority placed in direct contrast with Christ’s quiet presence. Around Christ and the High Priest stand shadowed attendants, their bodies reduced to broad, simplified forms. They are present but indistinct, almost swallowed by darkness, echoing the experiments of Cambiaso who often dissolved secondary figures into schematic shapes. Rather than functioning as narrative details, these half-seen figures intensify the focus on the central confrontation. Shadow becomes a stage of revelation: what is shown is clear and concentrated, while what is hidden in darkness speaks to the mystery of unbelief, to truths only partly grasped. The contrast gives visual form to a line from the opening of the Gospel of John: ‘The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it’ (John 1:5).

    The night setting also changes how the viewer experiences the scene. A trial in daylight would suggest public spectacle; a candlelit interrogation by night draws us into a private chamber, where we stand as silent witnesses, close yet powerless. This intimacy was at the heart of post-Tridentine Catholic painting, which aimed not at ornament but at inward stirring and meditation. The nocturne also echoed the rhythm of worship. In Catholic practice the office of Matins was prayed in the night or before dawn, when the faithful kept vigil in darkness, waiting for the first light of morning. To place Christ’s interrogation at night was to align it with that liturgical rhythm, where darkness becomes a time of testing and expectation, and the arrival of light signifies revelation.

    For Honthorst himself the work was decisive. Trained in Utrecht but transformed in Rome, he became known as Gherardo delle Notti for his mastery of candlelit drama. Christ before the High Priest shows him not as a derivative Caravaggist but as a painter who absorbed Venetian torchlight, Lombard twilight, Genoese reduction, and Roman immediacy, all filtered through Giustiniani’s discerning taste. When he returned to Utrecht in 1620 he carried this clarity north, shaping the Utrecht Caravaggisti and transmitting the Mediterranean nocturne into northern Europe.

    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London
    Gerrit van Honthorst (1592–1656), Christ before the High Priest, c.1617, Oil on canvas, 272 × 183 cm, National Gallery, London (displayed on the wall to the right of Caravaggio’s Supper at Emmaus, 1601)

    References

    Cavazzini, P. (2008) Painting as Business in Early Seventeenth-Century Rome. University Park: Penn State University Press

    Judson, J.R. (1959) Gerrit van Honthorst: A Discussion of His Position in Dutch Art. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff

    Judson, J.R. and Ekkart, R.E.O. (1999) Gerrit van Honthorst 1592–1656. Doornspijk: Davaco

    Schütze, S. (2001) Caravaggio: The Complete Works. Cologne: Taschen

    Papi, G. (ed.) (2015) Gherardo delle Notti: Quadri bizzarrissimi e cene allegre. Exh. cat. Florence: Galleria degli Uffizi. Florence: Giunti

    RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History (n.d.) Christ before the High Priest, Gerrit van Honthorst. RKDimages database entry no. 240360. Available at: https://rkd.nl/images/240360 (Accessed: 13 September 2025)

    Van der Sman, G. J. (2021) “The living conditions and social networks of northern Netherlandish Painters in Italy, c. 1600-1700: evaluation of archival sources”.Available at, https://www.academia.edu/62812644/The_living_conditions_and_social_networks_of_northern_Netherlandish_Painters_in_Italy_c_1600_1700_evaluation_of_archival_sources ( Accessed 13 September 2011 )

  • Salome with the Head of Saint John: Rediscovering Diana de Rosa, Annella di Massimo, a Forgotten Woman Artist of Baroque Naples

    Diana de Rosa, called Annella di Massimo (1602-1643), Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist, Oil on canvas, 127.5 x 99.7 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction, London, 2 July 2025

    Diana de Rosa, called Annella di Massimo (1602-1643), Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist, Oil on canvas, 127.5 x 99.7 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction, London, 2 July 2025
    Diana de Rosa, called Annella di Massimo (1602-1643), Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist, Oil on canvas, 127.5 x 99.7 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction, London, 2 July 2025

    This Salome with the Head of Saint John the Baptist, previously unknown to scholars, belongs to a body of work that has spent most of the last four centuries in near-total obscurity. Its author, Diana De Rosa (1602–1643), was born in Naples to Caterina de Mauro and the painter Tommaso de Rosa. Her father died in 1610, and her mother remarried in 1612, to the Caravaggist painter Filippo Vitale (1585–1650), a figure whose dark, naturalistic manner owed a clear debt to Caravaggio’s Neapolitan period and whose household functioned as a working studio. The relationship between De Rosa and Pacecco de Rosa (1607–1656), properly Giovanni Francesco de Rosa, remains unresolved in the literature: some sources identify Pacecco as an uncle from whom she received early instruction in drawing, while others argue, more convincingly, that he was her brother, and that both siblings trained under Vitale’s direction. What is not disputed is that the De Rosa-Vitale household constituted one of the most productive artistic dynasties in viceregal Naples, a family in which paint was, quite literally, the family business.

    By around 1621, De Rosa had entered the workshop of Gaspare del Popolo, where she met the painter Agostino Beltrano (c.1607–1656), whom she married in 1626. Her abilities, however, had already attracted the attention of Massimo Stanzione (1585–1656), the Cavaliere who ran the busiest and most prestigious studio in Naples at the time, rivalled in stature only by Jusepe de Ribera (1591–1652). Stanzione took her into his own workshop, where she produced paintings from his designs, which he then retouched before delivery to clients. It was this working arrangement, a recognised and contractual dependency rather than a casual association, that gave rise to her designation as ‘Annella di Massimo’ : Annella, the diminutive; di Massimo, possession. Her name, in other words, was absorbed into his.

    The principal biographical source for De Rosa’s life is Bernardo de Dominici (1683–1759), the self-appointed Vasari of Naples, whose three-volume Vite de’ pittori, scultori ed architetti napoletani [Lives of the Neapolitan Painters, Sculptors and Architects], published between 1742 and 1745, remains the only extended contemporary account of her career. De Dominici claims she maintained an active professional practice while raising seven children, and that Stanzione kept her on the workshop payroll during periods of absence for childbearing. Archival evidence confirms at least part of the domestic picture: baptismal records from the parish of Santa Maria della Carità show that two of her children, Nicola Tomaso and Agnese Chiara, were baptised on 21 December 1638 and 19 July 1640 respectively. But the details of De Dominici’s broader narrative have not been independently verified, and his testimony elsewhere has been shown to be unreliable. A 2017 study by Andrea Zezza posed the question directly in its title: Geniale imbroglione o conoscitore rigoroso? [Ingenious fraud or rigorous connoisseur?]. The answer, as with most things concerning De Dominici, is probably both.

    De Rosa is credited with ceiling paintings depicting scenes from the Life of the Virgin for the church of Santa Maria della Pietà dei Turchini in Naples, though these were destroyed when the roof collapsed in 1638. Three further scenes from the Life of the Virgin, executed for the church of San Giovanni Maggiore, survive in part: two are now held by the Museo Diocesano di Napoli. For the Royal Church of Monte Oliveto she painted a Madonna nursing the infant Christ; for the sacristy of Santa Maria degli Angeli at Pizzofalcone, a young Saint John the Baptist with a lamb. Neither work survives. A posthumous inventory records a bequest of twelve ducats from Diana di Rosa to the Theatine house of Santa Maria degli Angeli, suggesting she maintained ties with religious communities as patron as well as painter. What remains, in sum, is fragmentary: a few surviving canvases, a handful of attributions supported by stylistic comparison, and a documentary record that is rich in anecdote but thin on certainties.

    The date of De Rosa’s death in 1643 is not in dispute. The manner of it is. De Dominici claimed she was murdered by her husband Beltrano, driven by jealousy after a servant girl falsely reported that she was conducting an affair with Stanzione. The story has an unmistakably literary shape to it (a virtuous wife, a jealous husband, a lying maid, a wrongful death) and it entered popular culture readily enough. By the late nineteenth century, the Neapolitan painter Giuseppe Tramontano (dates unknown) had produced a canvas depicting De Rosa and Stanzione being spied upon by the treacherous servant, a painting now in the Intesa Sanpaolo collection. Current scholarship regards the murder narrative as unfounded. De Dominici himself noted, somewhat undermining his own account, that the painter Paolo de Matteis (1662–1728) disputed the story. The more probable cause of death is illness. She died affluent, and she was forty-one.

    The Salome appeared at Sotheby’s London on 2 July 2025 as property from an Italian private collection, estimated at £60,000–80,000. It sold for £317,500, more than quadrupling the high estimate. This is, at the very least, a market corrective. Until Giuseppe Porzio’s monograph of 2023, the first dedicated study of her work, De Rosa had no sustained modern treatment. Riccardo Lattuada has been instrumental in attributing several canvases to her over the last decade, working from direct examination and stylistic comparison to the core group of paintings assembled around her name. Her subjects, predominantly female (Lucretia, Sophonisba, Salome, various saints), share a physical type and a psychological register that are distinct from those of her master Stanzione, and that bear a meaningful relationship to the work of Artemisia Gentileschi (1593–c.1656), who was active in Naples during the same years.

    The Gallerie d’Italia in Naples staged the first exhibition to address De Rosa’s context directly: Donne nella Napoli spagnola: Un altro Seicento [Women in Spanish Naples: Another Seventeenth Century], running from 20 November 2025 to 22 March 2026, co-curated by Porzio alongside Antonio Ernesto Denunzio, Raffaella Morselli and Eve Straussman-Pflanzer. The show brought together sixty-nine works and positioned De Rosa as the essential counterpart to Gentileschi within the Neapolitan milieu, a figure no less significant for having been, until very recently, all but invisible. How many more paintings are in private collections, unrecognised or misattributed, is a question that only further research can answer. The Salome, previously unknown to scholars, suggests the answer may be: rather more than we thought.

    Postscript. In March 2026, following the Gallerie d’Italia exhibition, the Ordine degli Architetti di Napoli replaced a street plaque in the Vomero quarter that had read only “Annella di Massimo”. The new plaque gives her full name. Residents had petitioned to remove the original in the 1950s, on the grounds that the woman it honoured had probably never existed.


    References

    Dabbs, J.K. (2020) ‘Bernardo de Dominici (1683–1759 Naples) and the Vite de’ pittori, scultori ed architetti napoletani (1742–45)’, in Dabbs, J.K., Life Stories of Women Artists, 1550–1800. London: Routledge. Available at: https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/mono/10.4324/9781315091815-21 (Accessed: 2 July 2022).

    Denunzio, A.E., Morselli, R., Porzio, G. and Straussman-Pflanzer, E. (eds.) (2025) Donne nella Napoli spagnola: Un altro Seicento [Women in Spanish Naples: Another Seventeenth Century]. Exhibition catalogue, Gallerie d’Italia, Naples, 20 November 2025 – 22 March 2026. Naples: Gallerie d’Italia

    Porzio, G. (2012) ‘Ordine teatino e contesto artistico napoletano nel Seicento: Francesco Maria Caselli, Gaspare Del Popolo e una nota su Diana Di Rosa’, in D’Alessandro, D.A. (ed.) Sant’Andrea Avellino e i Teatini nella Napoli del Viceregno spagnolo: Arte, Religione, Società. Vol. II. Naples: M. D’Auria. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/8218479/Ordine_teatino_e_contesto_artistico_napoletano_nel_Seicento_Francesco_Maria_Caselli_Gaspare_Del_Popolo_e_una_nota_su_Diana_Di_Rosa (Accessed: 2 July 2025).

    Porzio, G. (2023) Diana Di Rosa: ‘Bellissima, onestissima, virtuosa dipintrice’ nella Napoli del Seicento [‘An Exceedingly Beautiful, Honest and Skilful Painter’ in Seventeenth-Century Naples]. Naples: Porcini

    Willette, T. (1986) ‘Bernardo De Dominici e le Vite de’ pittori, scultori ed architetti napoletani: Contributo alla riabilitazione di una fonte’, Ricerche sul ‘600 napoletano, pp. 255–273. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/678548/Bernardo_De_Dominici_e_le_Vite_depittori_scultori_ed_architetti_napoletani_Contributo_alla_riabilitazione_di_una_fonte (Accessed: 2 July 2025).

    Zezza, A. (2017) Bernardo De Dominici e le vite degli artisti napoletani: Geniale imbroglione o conoscitore rigoroso? [Bernardo De Dominici and the Lives of the Neapolitan Artists: Ingenious Fraud or Rigorous Connoisseur?]. Rome: Officina Libraria. Available at: https://www.academia.edu/33843108/Bernardo_De_Dominici_e_le_vite_degli_artisti_napoletani_prime_pagine_ (Accessed: 2 July 2025).

    Later correcions.

    Il Mondo di Suk (2026) ‘Vomero/ Nuova targa per la pittrice Diana De Rosa: l’ordine degli architetti di Napoli le restituisce identità e rispetto’, Il Mondo di Suk, 27 March. Available at: https://www.ilmondodisuk.com/vomero-nuova-targa-per-la-pittrice-diana-de-rosa-lordine-degli-architetti-di-napoli-le-restituisce-identita-e-rispetto-non-e-piu-solo-annella-di-massimo/ (Accessed: 2 April 2026).

  • Artemisia Gentileschi in Stuart London: David with the Head of Goliath, c.1638

    Artemisia Gentileschi ( 1593–1654), David with the head of Goliath, late 1630s, aoil on canvas, 202 x 137 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction 2 July 2025

    Artemisia Gentileschi ( 1593–1654), David with the head of Goliath, late 1630s, aoil on canvas, 202 x 137 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction 2 July 2025
    Artemisia Gentileschi ( 1593–1654), David with the head of Goliath, late 1630s, aoil on canvas, 202 x 137 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction 2 July 2025

    In the late 1630s, Artemisia Gentileschi was living and working in London, a move that placed her at the centre of one of the most ambitious courts in Europe. She had already built a substantial reputation in Italy, working across Florence, Rome, Venice, and Naples, and in 1638 she travelled to England, probably at the invitation of King Charles I, a collector whose holdings included major works by Titian, Raphael, and Mantegna acquired partly through the dissolution of the Gonzaga collection in 1627–28. Her father, Orazio Gentileschi (1563–1639), had been at the Stuart court since the mid-1620s, completing the celebrated ceiling paintings at the Queen’s House in Greenwich (an Allegory of Peace and the Arts) for Henrietta Maria, a commission that shows the seriousness with which the Stuarts pursued Continental talent. Artemisia’s arrival therefore placed her within a court already attuned to Caravaggesque naturalism through her father’s presence, though she brought to it an independent reputation earned across two decades of Italian practice. She was among the very few women of her age admitted to the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno in Florence, elected in 1616 under Medici patronage, a distinction carrying considerable institutional weight.

    Here, she engages directly with the Old Testament episode from 1 Samuel 17, in which David defeats the giant Goliath with a sling and severs his head with Goliath’s own sword. The subject was not unfamiliar territory for her. Her multiple treatments of Judith Slaying Holofernes (the versions in the Uffizi and the Museo di Capodimonte among the most viscerally charged) had already established her command of scenes in which violent liberation is rendered in intimate, psychologically loaded terms. The David and Goliath subject offered a related but distinct set of possibilities: where Judith acts with fierce agency in mid-stroke, David is shown in the aftermath, the violence completed, the moral weight of what has occurred settling across the composition.

    Recent conservation work revealed her signature and part of the date inscribed on the sword, confirming her authorship. The sword thus becomes a marker of both identity and agency, as Artemisia inscribes herself into the very instrument of decapitation, collapsing the distinction between maker and subject. This is consistent with her broader habit of self-inscription: in the Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting (c.1638–39, Royal Collection), also produced during the London years and almost certainly for Charles I, she fuses the identity of the painter with painting itself in an equally calculated act of self-definition. That both works appear to date from roughly the same moment gives the signature on the sword an additional biographical charge.

    The position of Goliath’s severed head, lying slack-jawed at David’s feet rather than held aloft, departs sharply from the conventional treatment of the subject. In Donatello’s bronze David (c.1440–60, Bargello), the giant’s head lies beneath the victor’s foot as a trophy; in Caravaggio’s David with the Head of Goliath (c.1609–10, Galleria Borghese), the severed head is raised into the picture space and identified, controversially, with Caravaggio’s own features. Artemisia rejects the expected show of triumph and turns instead towards the post-battle quiet, the psychological stillness that follows. The act of killing is over; what remains is something closer to reckoning. This refusal of spectacle in favour of interiority is among the qualities that modern scholars (particularly following Mary D. Garrard’s foundational 1989 monograph) have identified as characteristic of Artemisia’s reworking of inherited biblical subjects: a consistent displacement of heroic gesture towards contemplative, even ambivalent, stillness.

    Light falls starkly across David’s lap and limbs, the white folds of his sleeves, and the intricately wrought hilt, producing an interplay of illumination and shadow that sharpens the sense of drama. The technique owes a clear debt to Caravaggio, under whose indirect influence Artemisia had formed as an artist in Rome. She was active there in the years immediately following his death in 1610, and her early work absorbed his tenebrism with a directness suggesting close study of his canvases rather than secondhand transmission. Yet her handling of light here is less theatrical, the transitions between illuminated and shadowed passages smoother and less abrupt, inclined towards psychological complexity over dramatic shock. The warm tonality of the flesh, the studied specificity of the textile rendering, and the careful attention to the material reality of the sword hilt are consistent with the broader direction of her mature style as traced in recent technical scholarship by Judith Mann and others working on the conservation and technical analysis of her surviving canvases.

    Artemisia Gentileschi ( 1593–1654), David with the head of Goliath, late 1630s, aoil on canvas, 202 x 137 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction 2 July 2025
    Artemisia Gentileschi ( 1593–1654), David with the head of Goliath, late 1630s, aoil on canvas, 202 x 137 cm, Sotheby’s Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction 2 July 2025

    References

    Christiansen, K. and Mann, J.W. (eds.) (2001) Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.Available online at, https://archive.org/stream/OrazioandArtemisiaGentileschi/OrazioandArtemisiaGentileschi_djvu.txt (Accessed July 1 2025)

    Garrard, M.D. (1989) Artemisia Gentileschi: The Image of the Female Hero in Italian Baroque Art. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

    Treves, L., Barker, S., Cavazzini, P., Cropper, E. and Whitlum-Cooper, F. (2020) Artemisia. New Haven and London: Yale University Press

    Mann, J.W. (2009) ‘Identity signs: meanings and methods in Artemisia Gentileschi’s signatures’, Renaissance Studies, 23(1), pp. 71–107. (Available at: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Judith-Mann/publication/227794735_Identity_signs_Meanings_and_methods_in_Artemisia_Gentileschi’s_signatures/links/5ace69e1a6fdcc87840efa14/Identity-signs-Meanings-and-methods-in-Artemisia-Gentileschis-signatures.pdf (Accessed 1July 2025)

    Sotheby’s (2025) Old Master and 19th Century Paintings Evening Auction, 2 July 2025, Lot 18. Avaialble at , https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2025/old-master-and-19th-century-paintings-evening-auction-l25033/david-with-the-head-of-goliath (Accessed 1 July 2025)

  • Johann Carl Loth in Venice: A German Painter and the International Spirit of Baroque Art

     

    Johann Carl Loth (1632 – 1698), Saint Sebastian, before 1698, Oil on canvas, 117.5 x 98.5 cm, Schwarzenberg Palace, Prague

    Johann Carl Loth (1632 - 1698), Saint Sebastian, before 1698, Oil on canvas, 117.5 x 98.5 cm, Schwarzenberg Palace, Prague
    Johann Carl Loth (1632 – 1698), Saint Sebastian, before 1698, Oil on canvas, 117.5 x 98.5 cm, Schwarzenberg Palace, Prague

    Johann Carl Loth (1632–1698) left Munich for Rome after 1653 and reached Venice by 1656, where he remained until his death. He arrived carrying the formation of a court painter’s household: his father, Johann Ulrich Loth (1590–1662), had trained in Rome before settling in Munich, which meant that knowledge of Italian painting was not a discovery for the son but an inheritance. In Venice, Loth entered the circle of painters known as the Tenebrosi — a loose grouping, recognised as such by contemporaries, that included Giovanni Battista Langetti (1635–1676) and Antonio Zanchi (1631–1722), painters who worked in a dark, anatomically intense manner derived from Caravaggio by way of Ribera and Neapolitan naturalism. The movement left a permanent mark on Loth’s practice: his figures are characterised above all by the naked male body, rendered with muscular precision and shaped by a raking light pulled from near darkness. The biographer Arnold Houbraken (1660–1719), writing not long after Loth’s death, placed him among three grand masters of painting called Karel — the others being Karel Dujardin and Carlo Maratta — a recognition that quietly measures the span of his reputation across the Dutch Republic, Venice, and Rome. By the time of his death he had become, in the perception of his contemporaries, a Venetian painter.

    The painting depicts one of the most paradoxical figures in the Christian martyr tradition. Sebastian was a soldier who had served the emperor from within, concealing his faith while rising to a captaincy of the Praetorian Guard under Diocletian (c.244–311), using his position to minister to imprisoned Christians before his discovery and condemnation. He survived the first attempt on his life — left bound to a stake and pierced with arrows by his fellow soldiers — only to confront Diocletian a second time and be beaten to death. It was the first death, the arrow-pierced body, that Western art seized on: a subject that permitted painters to display command of the male nude in extremis, combining anatomical precision with dramatic light, suffering with a strange physical beauty. From Mantegna (c.1431–1506) and Bellini (c.1430–1516) through to Titian, the figure had accumulated a rich visual history in northern Italy before it reached the Tenebrosi, who stripped away its Renaissance serenity and replaced it with something rawer.

    What this painting and the circumstances of its creation indicate about the world of the Old Masters is that it cannot be studied or presented through national art historical narratives. It was produced in Loth’s studio in Venice and entered the collection of Count František Antonín Berka z Dubé (1635–1706), the last of an ancient Bohemian noble line with estates in northern Bohemia and close ties to the Habsburg court; the precise circumstances of acquisition are unrecorded. It is now held by the National Gallery Prague and displayed at Schwarzenberg Palace. The painting does not belong to any clearly defined national style or school. Its subject matter may carry devotional symbolism suited to post-war Catholic Bohemia, but its formal language grows from something more specific than a vague Venetian tradition: Loth fused the colourist inheritance of Titian (c.1488–1576) and Tintoretto (1518–1594) with the Caravaggesque chiaroscuro he had absorbed in Rome and then refined through the Tenebrosi. Loth himself, born in Munich, was not an emissary of a Germanic school but a figure shaped by Venice’s porous and competitive art market. That Joachim von Sandrart (1606–1688) included him in the Teutsche Academie [German Academy of Architecture, Sculpture and Painting] of 1675, effectively annexing him to a German tradition, is itself evidence of the historiographic distortion the painting resists.

    The choice of Sebastian was not incidentally devotional, and it was not singular in meaning. The saint had served as plague intercessor since the late seventh century, when his relics were credited with ending an epidemic in Rome, and Venice had particular reason to keep that association alive. The epidemic of 1630–31 had killed roughly a third of the city’s population, somewhere in the region of fifty thousand people, a catastrophe that produced among other responses the votive commission of Santa Maria della Salute, designed by Baldassare Longhena (1597–1682), and a lasting intensification of plague-saint devotion. It is also worth noting that the Tenebrosi style — the very visual language of this painting — emerged in the years immediately following that plague. The darkness, the emotional pressure, the insistence on the suffering body: these were not accidental aesthetic choices but a mode of seeing that had formed in an atmosphere of mass death. Sebastian, however, was simultaneously a soldier-martyr: a man who had held his faith under military pressure before being exposed and condemned. For a Bohemian patron collecting in the shadow of the Thirty Years’ War (1618–1648) — a conflict that had begun in Bohemia, culminated in forced Habsburg re-catholicisation after the Battle of White Mountain (1620), and left the province exhausted — that double valence carried weight. The soldier who concealed his faith was not a remote hagiographic figure. To acquire a Sebastian by a painter of Loth’s standing was to acquire not just a devotional object but one whose subject and style alike had been formed by catastrophe on both sides of the Alps.

    To describe such a work as ‘German’ or ‘Italian’ collapses the true complexity of its making. Nor can it be treated with the same analytical tools used to study later art, which emerged under the very different pressures of nationalism, state academies, and professionalisation. The tendency to assign Loth to a national tradition is not merely modern carelessness: Sandrart’s Teutsche Academie is an early example of the same impulse. Old Master painting functioned through mobility, workshop economies, and a shared visual language that circulated across dozens of distinct centres. Among Loth’s documented pupils was Johann Michael Rottmayr (1654–1730), born in Laufen am Inn in Bavaria, who trained under Carlotto in Venice and went on to become the leading fresco painter of the Austrian Habsburg lands, working at Melk Abbey and the Peterskirche in Vienna: the transmission of technique moved through the same networks as the movement of paintings themselves. This martyr scene, made in Venice and installed in a Bohemian collection, stands as evidence of a transnational visual culture that resists the later mythologies of national tradition. It is not a national object but the product of an international, pre-modern system of artistic creation in which style, patronage, and devotional need converged without respect for the borders that later centuries would draw around them.


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    Horn, H.J. and Van Leeuwen, R. (eds.) (2021) Houbraken Translated: Arnold Houbraken’s Great Theatre of the Netherlandish Painters and Paintresses, vol. 3, p. 61. RKD Studies [online]. The Hague: RKD – Netherlands Institute for Art History. Available at: https://houbraken-translated.rkdstudies.nl/3-60-119/page-60-69/ (Accessed: 22 June 2025).