I’m not sure what this mountain range is, but it must be the Alps? From UK to Italy?
Am I right?
Back in England again.
Personal blog on art history, art exhibitions, travel, film and current events.
I’m not sure what this mountain range is, but it must be the Alps? From UK to Italy?
Am I right?
Back in England again.
In England, we’ve had an inquiry into the worst miscarriage of justice in British legal history.
They’ve just produced the first volume of their report.
Two points from the news report:
(1) It’s incredible to me that people are still waiting for their compensation. Or, if they’re been compensated, they’ve been short-changed by the state through an adversarial process. No respect or decency.
(2) The software company needs to be held accountable for their folly. Somebody somewhere made some seriously bad decisions and they need to be held accountable. A software bug should have been fixed years ago.
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For people outside the UK, there is a gripping TV show drama about this miscarriage called “Mr Bates vs The Post Office”
God. How horrific and tragic.
Those poor little campers didn’t have a chance.
I’ve seen videos of rivers swelling well over 15-20 feet in a few mins.
Hard to wrap your head around.
My deepest condolences to all of the affected families.
Another busy day.
We had a walk around the Piazza del Popolo and went into the Basilica to see the Caravaggio paintings.
Unfortunately, I didn't realise how many other treasures were there (thanks to wikipedia) so I didn't look around too much.
Will have to return one day.
Enjoy the photos.
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While doing some research, I came across an interesting journal article by Shannon E. Kuziow in “Pope Sixtus IV at Santa Maria del Popolo: Marian Devotion and the Papal Agenda”. Unfortunately, it isn’t freely available. But the abstract says:
Throughout much of his career in the Catholic Church, Pope Sixtus IV was actively involved in promoting the cult of the Virgin Mary. He directly sponsored the construction or renovation of several Marian sites in Rome, including the Church of Santa Maria del Popolo, which houses a miraculous icon of the Madonna. Inside the church, Sixtus performed weekly devotions and regularly held ceremonies bolstering and celebrating the major political events of his pontificate. Through an analysis of the papal rituals that unfolded before the icon, this article demonstrates that Sixtus’s dedication to the Madonna served as a vehicle of expression for advancing the interconnected theological, devotional, and political aspects of his papal agenda. It further argues that the pope’s support of the Marian cult played a crucial role in his perceived ability to harness divine aid in the larger temporal issues plaguing the universal Church.
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This is the martyrdom of Saint Peter. He apparently requested to be crucified upside down - unworthy of dying in the manner of Christ.
Caravaggio captures the physical laboriousness of the execution. It all seems rather mundane. We only see Saint Peter and he doesn’t seem to be the visage of quiet resignation and acceptance. In fact, it’s unnerving and horrifying. It’s a dear old man getting tortured. It’s a sick painting. I also feel sorry for the executioners. It looks like a gruelling task. One can see the power of his chiaroscuro in storytelling.
I also wonder if the partially-illuminated man is a self-portrait? I especially love the shadow of the rope over the executioner’s back.
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An iconic painting.
I have seen this painting so many times in books, and it has always fascinated and horrified me.
Before being “Saint Peter”, he was the Roman/Jewish Saul of Tarsus. A persecutor of Christian for breaching the law of Moses. On the way to Damascus, he was (apparently) struck down by Holy light and heard the voice of Christ.
It’s a very intimate and psychological painting.
Saul is at the extremity of vulnerability — blinded by God, Christ speaking to him, with a powerful horse’s hindquarters raised and its hoof positioned to deliver a deadly kick to his exposed chest.
Caravaggio’s play on light is so effective. It looks like a single light bulb above the painting. Illuminating from the heavens and onto the singularity of Saul’s abdomen.
This painting is gripping today - I can’t imagine its effect with parishioners in Rome.
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Rubbish photo quality.
This is a great contrast to Caravaggio. More idealised, less chiarscuro, more balanced/dynamic painting with the viewer's eyes directed to Mary.
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Hi Bloggers
I’m sharing a few photos of Porta San Paolo in Rome.
I was looking for a post office to send my family some postcards, and I walked by this ancient gate.
According to wikipedia, it “is one of the southern gates in the 3rd-century Aurelian Walls of Rome, Italy.”
Hi Bloggers,
Just a few photos of us walking by The Ponte Vittorio Emanuele II bridge to get some lunch.
This was a few days ago.
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Commissioned by Cardinal Giulio de Medici (Pope Clement VII) for the French community in Rome.
Very special because it holds Caravaggio masterpieces in situ on the life of Saint Matthew.
More information here: Walking Tours of Rome - San Luigi dei Francesi: Cappella Contarelli
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Named after a French cardinal who died in the 16th century and left instructions for its decoration with scenes from the life of the saint.
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An angel guiding Saint Matthew as he writes the Gospel.
This is a second version of the same painting. The first has since been lost:
Caravaggio actually painted two versions of the altarpiece. His first painting was rejected and he was obliged to paint a second version, the work we see today. According to Bellori's account of Caravaggio's life in his book Vite de' Pittori, Scultori et Architetti Moderni (1672), 'the priests took it down saying that the figure with its legs crossed and its feet rudely exposed to the public, had neither decorum nor the appearance of a saint'. The rejected painting was snapped up by Vincenzo Giustiniani, a rich banker and art collector. It ended up in a gallery in Berlin, where, sadly, it perished during the second world war.
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Hello again bloggers,
This post is a collection of photos of our visit to Rome’s most elegant checklist spots.
We had a great time over those days.
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We started the day visiting the monumental staircase in Rome.
It’s called the “Spanish Steps” merely because it adjoins the Spanish Embassy to the Holy See in the Piazza di Spagna since the 17th century. It was funded by a Frenchman and it connected to a French church.
Spanish Steps appeared in The Talented Mr. Ripley with Matt Damon and Gwyneth Paltrow:
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Breathtaking masterpiece of Baroque.
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