Friday, April 24, 2015

10 Hidden Self Portraits

A tradition emerged in the Renaissance for the painter to hide a self portrait of themselves in the background of the painting.  Let's look at ten examples of this.

#1- Raphael in The School of Athens

Raphael painted this fresco in the papal apartments at the Vatican at the same time that Michelangelo was painting the Sistine Chapel.  The pope at the time was Pope Julius II and he was having Raphael paint a series of large paintings in all the Papal apartments.

Raphael, School of Athens, 1509-10, Stanza della Segnatura, Papal Apartments, Vatican Museum

The fresco, now known as The School of Athens, shows a variety of famous figures in a classical setting.  Raphael used several of his contemporaries who were artists to represent famous ancient Greek scholars, philosophers, scientists and mathematicians. Among them (circled in red below) are Leonardo da Vinci in the center, Michelangelo seated and a self portrait of Raphael at the far right.

Raphael is looking out at the viewer in a hidden self-portrait, a style that already had a long history in the Renaissance as we can see in some earlier examples.



#2- Lorenzo Ghiberti in The Gates of Paradise

Lorenzo Ghiberti's beautiful bronze set of doors, his second set for the Baptistery of Florence which hung on the east side were dubbed 'The Gates of Paradise' by fellow Florentine Michelangelo.  The viewer would primarily be paying attention to any of the ten large biblical scenes portrayed on the doors.  However Ghiberti actually hid two small self-portraits of himself in the decoration between the large panels. 



The first was a portrait of himself as he looked at the current time, and the second was of him as a young boy looking towards a small portrait of his mother.
Ghiberti, Gates of Paradise, Florence Baptistery, 1425-52








Ghiberti, Gates of Paradise, Florence Baptistery, 1425-52














Andrea Mantegna, The Meeting, Camera degli Sposi, Mantua, 1465-74


























Detail with Self-Portrait

#3- Andrea Mantegna in the Camera degli Sposi

Andrea Mantegna is perhaps best known for his 'Camera degli Sposi' (Wedding Chamber) also known as the 'Camera Picta' (Painted Room) in the Ducal Palace in Mantua.  The rooms has frescos along the walls and the ceiling.  Just as Ghiberti did, Mantegna hid a small self portrait among the decorative bands.  Both the painted wall showing the well known meeting scene and a detail of the decorative band are shown above.


#4-  Botticelli in The Adoration of the Magi

Botticelli painted more than one version of the Adoration of the Magi, this one was painted in 1475.

Botticelli, Adoration of the Magi, Uffizi Museum, 1475


Botticelli is thought to be the figure at the far right, looking out at the viewer as seen in the detail below.  Just as in the later Raphael painting the figure is at the far right, and rather than taking part in the action of the painting he is staring out to the viewer's space.  This is a style that would be repeated by other Italian Renaissance painters.

Detail of Botticelli's Self-Portrait in the Adoration of the Magi


#5- Fillipino Lippi in The Dispute with Simon Magus



Lippi, The Dispute with Simon Magus (1481–1482) Brancacci Chapel, Santa Maria del Carmine in Florence

The Dispute with Simon Magus (1481–1482) is a fresco in the Brancacci Chapel in the Santa Maria del Carmine in Florence, Italy.  The Brancacci Chapel is famous for being the chapel where Masaccio and Masolino first used one point perspective in painting.  The frescos all show scenes from the life of St. Peter.  Lippi studied under Botticelli and this self-portrait has several similarities in the way it is portrayed as Botticelli's in the Adoration of the Magi.

Detail of Lippi self-portrait in The Dispute with Simon Magus in the Brancacci Chapel

#6- Michelangelo in The Last Judgement 

The Last Judgement was painted in 1537-41, he started painting it in the Sistine Chapel 25 years after he had finished painting his famous ceiling frescos.  The act of painting in fresco, especially at the enormous scale of the Sistine Chapel left the artist feeling worn out and drained.  He lets the viewer know as much by including a hidden, and rather grotesque, self-portrait as the flayed skin of St. Bartholomew.  St. Bartholomew is sitting on a cloud just below and to the right of Christ and is holding his flayed skin as a symbol of his own martyrdom. 

Michelangelo, The Last Judgement, 1537-41, Sistine Chapel, Vatican



#7- Sofonisba Anguissola in Bernardino Campi Painting Sofonisba Anguissola 

This work dates from the late 1550's and is less a hidden self-portrait than a unique variant on other self portraits.  This painting both showed her own self-portrait and showed the fact that a well known artist had painted her.  However it was extremely clever as it wasn't presented as a straight self-portrait.  The artist even convincingly uses two painting styles to differentiate a person from a painted person.


Anguissola, Bernardino Campi Painting Sofonisba Anguissola, 1550's,


#8- Pontormo in the Deposition of Christ from the Cross

Pontormo, Deposition of Christ, 1525-28, Santa Felicita, Florence

What is interesting about Pontormo is that he used his own face to model the majority of his faces on, so there are echos of his features in several figures in both this work and others.  Just as in several of his Florentine Renaissance predecessors he paints himself at the far right and looking out at the viewer. 

This painting is from 1525-28 and was painted in the new style of Mannerism which followed the Italian High Renaissance and was inspired by Michelangelo. 

9- Caravaggio in David with the Head of Goliath 

This painting done in 1609–1610 has another type of grotesque hidden self-portrait.  Caravaggio painted in his own features as those of the severed head of the giant Goliath.  We know that Caravaggio, whose given name was Michelangelo Merisi, was inspired by Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel ceiling since the famous gesture of Adam in the ceiling fresco show up in his Calling of St. Matthew.  Perhaps he was also influenced by his macabre self-portrait from the Last Judgement when he painted this hidden self-portrait.

Caravaggio, David with the Head of Goliath, 1609-10, Borghese Gallery, Rome
 
10- Velázquez in Las Meninas

Diego Velázquez, Las Meninas, 1656, The Prado, Madrid

Velázquez painted Las Meninas in 1656 while he was the royal court painter for the King of Spain, King Philip IV.  This is one of the best known and most analyzed paintings in art history.  The subject of the work is the princess, Infanta Margarita Teresa and her attendants.  However there are several figures hidden in the painting and the most prominent of those is the painter himself, in partial shadow working at his easel to the left.

The reason that he has included himself in this work has been often discussed, is this a type of artistic calling card, a way to show his importance at court, does he feel he is part of the royal family or is he simply painting a realistic version of all that goes on in the day to day life in the royal court?  Maybe he knows he is creating a slight illusion for the viewer and is giving us a puzzle to sort out.

There are many more hidden self portraits in art history, a clever way for the painter to leave their mark upon their work and include themselves in the interesting scenes they portray.



Friday, April 17, 2015

The Winged Victory of Samothrace

One of the most majestic sculptures ever created is the Winged Victory of Samothrace.  This is truly one of my favorite works of art and I was fortunate enough to have recently seen it when I visited the Louvre while in Paris.


Though the figure is missing both its head and arms it has long been considered to be one of the most moving and inspirational works in the world.

Perhaps the fact that the sculpture is missing key pieces only adds to the Romantic nature of the ancient work, giving it more of a sense of mystery.  The motion of both the wings and the dress billowing in the wind give the work an awe-inspiring element.

The Winged Victory of Samothrace, 200-190 BC, marble,  Louvre, Paris

It was discovered in 1863 by French archaeologist, Charles Champoiseau and within 20 years was brought to the Louvre museum in Paris.  It was found on the Greek island of Samothrace, and is thought to have been created around 200-190 BC. The dating is uncertain but the work has many of the characteristics attributed to Hellenism, the period after Alexander the Great ruled. Alexander's military campaign brought Greek influences east and eastern artistic influences to Greece. Some of the hallmarks of the Hellenistic style include art that is dramatic, theatrical and emotional.  Sculptural poses are typically filled with movement, the figures created showed a wide range of real people rather than just focusing on the idealized beauty of the earlier Greek Classical age.

The Winged Victory, or Nike, was created to stand on the prow of a ship, also sculpted in marble.  The Nike is in an off-white parian marble and the ship in a darker gray lartos marble which came from Rhodes.  The Nike herself is just over 8 feet tall and her place on the ship's prow adds to the height of the work.

In Greek and Roman mythology, the Nike was the Goddess of victory, she was shown as being a winged figure who would fly down from Mount Olympus.  While the Winged Victory of Samothrace is the most well-known depiction, as well as being the largest, many smaller scale figurines and statues of Nike were sculpted in the ancient world.  The main characteristics of the goddess were wings and usually a sense of landing or alighting.

This inspirational work is thought to have commemorated a naval victory, though there are a few theories on which navy and which battle.  One thought was that since the base is from marble found in Rhodes and their army was renowned, it was a Rhodian naval victory. Another theory is that it was related to a Macedonian victory since stylistically it was closer to Macedonian art.


Rather than being in one of the many art galleries in the museum, the Winged Victory sits at the top of a large staircase which provides a perfect vantage point from which to view it.  It is positioned just outside of the Grand Gallery which houses all the Italian Renaissance paintings.  The visitor's view of the work as they climb the staircase only adds to the majestic feeling of the sculpture.

While it is now possible to walk around the sculpture and see it from all sides, it was meant to sit in a niche carved into a hillside which overlooked a temple complex known as the Sanctuary for the Great Gods, and was possibly meant to be seen from one side since the left side is more polished than the right.  Emory University  has done extensive research and excavations of the site at Samothrace including recreating what the Sanctuary would have looked like and how the Winged Victory would have originally been seen. 

During my visit I took several photos to post on my blog, but it is hard to capture the true beauty and monumentality of this work in a photograph. 

The statue has recently been unveiled after a year long conservation process by the museum.

The Winged Victory of Samothrace has inspired countless artists and visitors to the Louvre, much as it must have inspired those who saw it when it was first created in the 2nd century AD.





Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Upcoming Museum Exhibits for 2015


2015 is an exciting year for some major museum exhibits, here are five exhibits that will be showing in 2015.  If you live in these areas or are planning to travel there make sure to stop in.  I have listed things in various places across the US as well as Vancouver, BC.  I am hoping to visit at least a few of these, and I was fortunate to see one exhibit in Florence before it travels to Los Angeles later this year.

Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853–1890). Irises, 1890. Oil on canvas; 29 x 36 1/4 in. (73.7 x 92.1 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
 New York, Gift of Adele R. Levy, 1958 (58.187)



Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY

May 12–August 16, 2015


Vincent van Gogh (1853–1890) brought his work in Provence to a close with exuberant bouquets of spring flowers—two of irises and two of roses, in contrasting formats and color schemes—in which he sought to impart a "calm, unremitting ardor" to his "last touch of the brush." Painted on the eve of his departure from the asylum at Saint-Rémy and conceived as a series or ensemble on a par with the Sunflowers decoration painted earlier in Arles, the group includes the Metropolitan Museum's Irisesand Rosesand their counterparts: the upright Irisesfrom the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, and the horizontal Roses from the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.


This exhibition will reunite the four paintings for the first time since the artist's death and is timed to coincide with the blooming of the flowers that captivated his attention. It will open 125 years to the week that Van Gogh announced to his brother Theo, on May 11 and 13, 1890, that he was working on these "large bouquets," and will provide a singular opportunity to reconsider Van Gogh's artistic aims and the impact of dispersal and color fading on his intended results.





Vancouver Artgallery, Vancouver, BC
June 13 to October 4, 2015




Sandro Botticelli, The Annunciation, c. 1490–95
oil, tempera, and gold leaf on walnut panel
Glasgow Museums; Bequeathed by Archibald McLellan, 1856 (174)
© CSG CIC Glasgow Museums Collection
Courtesy American Federation of Arts


With works by some of the greatest names in European art, Of Heaven and Earth examines the thematic and stylistic developments in Italian art–from the religious paintings of the late Middle Ages and Renaissance to the secular neoclassical and genre paintings of the 19th century. The remarkable breadth of the exhibition showcases the outstanding quality of works by figures such as Giovanni Bellini, Sandro Botticelli, Domenichino, Francesco Guardi and Titian alongside other lesser-known masters.

Organized by the American Federation of Arts and Glasgow Museums. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities, the JFM Foundation, and Mrs. Donald M. Cox. Additional funding for the extension of the exhibition tour to the Vancouver Art Gallery is provided by d'Amico Società di Navigazione. In-kind support is provided by Barbara and Richard S. Lane and Christie's.



Diego Velázquez, An Old Woman Cooking Eggs, 1618. Oil on canvas. Scottish National Gallery





Botticelli to Braque: Masterpieces from the National Galleries of Scotland




March 7–May 31, 2015 




June 28, 2015 to September 20, 2015


The 55 paintings in the exhibition span a period of more than 400 years (1490–1932) and include some of the greatest holdings of the Scottish National Gallery, Scottish National Portrait Gallery and Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art—the three institutions that comprise the National Galleries of Scotland in Edinburgh.


The paintings from the Scottish National Gallery include many of the major schools of art—Italian, French and Dutch, in addition to Scottish. Many of these works have never been seen in the United States, including Sandro Botticelli’s Virgin Adoring the Sleeping Christ Child (c. 1490), which has not been exhibited outside of Scotland for more than 150 years. Other artists include the Renaissance masters Titian and Paolo Veronese; the 17th-century painters El Greco, Diego Velázquez, Sir Anthony van Dyck, Frans Hals, Jan Lievens, Rembrandt van Rijn and Johannes Vermeer; and such 19th-century figures as Camille Pissarro, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, John Singer Sargent, Paul Gauguin and Paul Cézanne. The exhibition will also feature celebrated Scottish painters Allan Ramsay and Sir Henry Raeburn.


Paul Cézanne, The Big Trees, ca. 1904. Oil on canvas. Scottish National Gallery






Power and Pathos: Bronze Sculpture of the Hellenistic World
Palazzo Strozzi, Florence, Italy


March14-June 21, 2015
The Getty Center, Los Angeles,CA

July 28–November 1, 2015

During the three centuries between the reigns of Alexander the Great and Augustus, artists around the Mediterranean created innovative, realistic sculptures of physical power and emotional intensity. Bronze—with its tensile strength, reflective effects, and ability to hold the finest detail—was employed for dynamic compositions, dazzling displays of the nude body, and graphic expressions of age and character. This unprecedented international loan exhibition unites about fifty significant bronzes of the Hellenistic age.

This exhibition was organized by the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington with the participation of the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici della Toscana. It is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities. 







Seattle Art Museum


Oct 1 2015 – Jan 10 2016




The Seattle Art Museum is proud to present Intimate Impressionism from the National Gallery of Art (in Washington, D.C.). The collection is comprised of extraordinary paintings, considered to be the jewels of one of the finest collections of French Impressionism in the world.


This exhibition will feature 71 intimately scaled paintings by Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masters, including Édouard Manet, Auguste Renoir, Claude Monet, Eugène Boudin, Paul Cézanne, Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, Pierre Bonnard, Édouard Vuillard, Paul Gauguin, and Vincent van Gogh, among others. These works, which are prominently presented in the East Wing of the National Gallery, have long been treasured by the museum’s visitors and prized by art historians.


This will be the first time the beloved collection has gone on tour and it is only because the East Wing will be closed for renovation. The majority of works come from the celebrated Ailsa Mellon Bruce Collection, given to the National Gallery of Art in 1970. This core group is bolstered by works from the Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon Collection and gifts of several other important collectors.


Organized by the National Gallery of Art and curated locally by Chiyo Ishikawa, Susan Brotman Deputy Director for Art and Curator of European Painting and Sculpture for the Seattle Art Museum.


The exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington.


Special exhibitions at SAM are made possible by donors to the SAM Fund for Special Exhibitions and Wells Fargo


Madame Monet and Her Son, 1874, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, French, 1841-1919, oil on canvas, 19 13/16 x 26 3/4 in., National Gallery of Art, Ailsa Mellon Bruce Collection, 1970.17.60











Saturday, March 7, 2015

The Excavations at Pompeii, Neoclassical and Romantic Art


The Resurgence of an Empire: The Excavations at Pompeii and their Influence on Neoclassical and Romantic Art



In 79ADMount Vesuvius erupted burying Pompeii during the early Roman Empire, however the first excavations didn’t occur until the mid-18th century some 1,700 years later. Thus with the first archeological explorations, the long defunct Roman Empire then reached across time to exert new influence the Neoclassical and Romantic eras.


Still life with Fruit, House of Julia Felix, Pompeii, Excavated in 1755

There are many examples that can be used to link the civilizations of the Roman Empire with that of the 18th and 19th century through the rediscovery of vast amounts art. With each new discovery during the excavations the splendor of Rome inspired modern art and culture.



Excavations under the Bourbon King Charles III

In 1738 when the Bourbon King Charles III was King of Naples, his military engineer Alcubierre discovered the site at Herculaneum while planning a new Royal hunting palace.  Those excavations led to the discovery of Pompeii in 1748.  Alcubierre remained the director of the project through 1780.  At the time the royal family had no idea that Pompeii was so vast that over 250 years later archeologists would still be unearthing the city.


Still life Wall Painting, House of Julia Felix, Pompeii, Excavated in 1755

Each phase of excavation can be seen as tying in with the leadership of Naples at the time, in 1748 it was the Bourbon King Charles III, a lover of antiquity.  During his reign the Archeological Museum in Naples was founded to house the large Farnese collection of antique sculptures he would inherit from his Italian mother, Elisabetta Farnese.  The museum grew to house the art from the Vesuvian excavations.  Major buildings unearthed in this first period of include the House of Julia Felix in 1755 and the Villa of Cicero in 1759. 



Contemporary society was in thrall at these discoveries, particularly in how colorful and well preserved the wall paintings were.  There are very few surviving examples of Roman wall painting elsewhere and both the technical skill and decorative elements were completely astonishing to those who saw them.  Equally impressive were the large floor mosaics created with thousands of chips or rock or pebbles.


Street Musician floor mosaic, Villa of Cicero, Pompeii, Excavated in 1759-63

The unearthing of Pompeii helped spread the Neoclassical movement that had started earlier in the century.  The city became a regular stop on the “Grand Tour” that many aristocratic travelers went on.  King Charles left Naples in 1759 to rule Spain and put his third son, Ferdinand I in charge of ruling Naples.



Excavations under the Bourbon King Ferdinand I (1760-1798)

The decade of the 1760’s marked an active era of excavations including: the Necropolis, the Basilica of Herculaneum, the theaters and the Triangular Forum.  The building which had the largest influence on art and culture was the Temple of Isis, unearthed in 1764, this was the only intact Roman temple that had been found.  The cult of Isis was widespread throughout the Roman Empire at the time of the eruption.

The portico was decorated in fourth style wall paintings depicting the story of the Egyptian goddess Isis.  Many objects were found in this that inspired artists such as a full sized marble statue of Venus wringing out her hair and a bronze tripod brazier with sphinxes as legs.  The tripod in particular held a fascination for artists who faithfully copied it such as Piranesi and the French artist Pacris in 1777. 



Tripod from the Temple of Isis, Piranesi, 1770's

18thCentury Art and Architecture influenced by Pompeii

Giovanni Battista Piranesi, in particular had long been interested in Roman ruins, his etchings of which were collected by Grand Tour patrons.  His scenes of antiquity were majestic and inspiring and added to the overall taste for the Neoclassical.  In addition, Piranesi designed interior objects, some were inspired by Pompeii such as a small table designed in 1768 which uses imaginative winged animals as legs.  He took motifs from the Isis tripod and adapted the style for the Neoclassical.

Birth of Venus, Fresco from the Garden Wall at the Villa Venus Marina, Pompeii


In other design works he used ancient images and suited them 18th century tastes as seen in this example of a design for a fireplace for the Earl of Exeter in which he directly transfers the birth of Venus from a fresco on a garden wall.

Design for a Fireplace for the Earl of Exeter, Burghley House, Piranesi



Since in the mid to late 18thcentury the majority of visitors to Pompeii were aristocratic travelers, much of the initial influence on the arts came through in two ways.  The first was in collecting, or in other words the taking of ancient artifacts to add to their own private art collections.  The second was in their widespread use of Neoclassical design when they returned home. 

Perhaps no one adapted Pompeii for 18thcentury styles as the Scottish architect Robert Adam (1728-1792). The private homes and villas that were unearthed in Pompeii were large and the interior wall paintings full of bold colors.  Adam’s clientele wanted adaptions of Pompeian art in their own homes.
Part of the glass drawing room, Northumberland House, London
Designed from 1770; made 1773-1775

Adam designed interiors for contemporary aristocratic taste, which were influenced by the opulence of the villas in Pompeii, such as, rich colors, inlaid marble flooring reminiscent of mosaics and reproductions of antique sculpture.  Adam was one of the most highly sought after architects and designers, and through his designs the late 18th century taste for Pompeii spread.  Other artists followed in Adam’s footsteps. 


It is quite interesting that as a direct result of the excavations at Pompeii early Roman Empirical interior design tastes were now dictating the preference of the late 18th century.

Louis-Gustave Taraval, Section of a Neoclassical Salon, 1785

The other way images of Pompeii spread was through illustrated books, Jerome Richard wrote a complete guide to the works, reissued in the 1780’s called Voyage Pittoresque a Naples et en Sicile.  Pompeii was also visited by French artists studying at the Royal Academy in Paris who were awarded the Prix-de-Rome.  While they were studying in Rome, several of those artists visited Pompeii and drew what they saw.  Those who illustrated this volume included the well known 18th century French artist Fragonard.  They filled the pages with details examples of all the work that was unearthed so far.


Judith Harris writes in her book “Pompeii Awakened” that after the reissued book came out:

“The very concept of what was meant by classical art and architecture had to be reformulated.”1



Meaning, there were several surprising elements that the 18th Century found out about Roman art and society through the resurfacing of objects.  Up until this time much of what was known of the Classical Era came through writing or ruins.  The Empire of Ancient Rome had been romanticized and the reality of the Romans didn’t match the idealized expectations of the public.



Perhaps there is no better example than the large amount of erotic art found in Pompeii which both shocked and fascinated the population.  In the 1750’s King Charles briefly enacted a ban on the excavations after being offended by the sight of an infamous statue of Pan. This art was stored in a locked room in the museum at Naples which could only be accessed by special permission.  Some felt it was a sign that the Pompeians had caused their own destruction due to sin.  However others began to seek out the erotic art for their own private collections.

Lovatelli Venus, Villa of Diomeded, Excavated 1771-74
Painted Marble, 2nd Century BC, Getty Images


Another example of rethinking what was meant by classical art is that all of the pristine white marble sculptures one associated with the Romans had in fact been brightly painted.  This can be seen in the example of the Lovatelli Venus.  Her hair and robes had been painted using encaustic, a wax based paint which would adhere to the marble.  In most cases painted statues would appear white after being buried or exposed to the elements, but in the case of Pompeii the paint was better preserved on the sculpture found there.



Parthenopaen Republic and Bourbon Exile

The French Revolution worried the court at Naples as the King was related to the French Bourbons and his wife, Queen Maria Carolina was the sister of Marie Antoinette.  On Christmas Eve in 1798 King Ferdinand fled to Sicily as the French army marched on Italy.  For several months in 1799 the French Army under the reign of the Parthenopaen Republic ruled Naples.  Ferdinand fled again in 1805 with the invasion of Napoleon’s army.  During most of that time the excavations were put on hold. 



Excavations under the French decade of Napoleonic rule (1805-15)

The next era was known as the French decade, Naples was first ruled by Joseph Bonaparte and then by the Murat’s, Napoleon’s brother-in-law, Joachim and his wife Caroline.  The Murat’s had a strong interest in the classics and under their rule the digs not only resumed but flourished.  They passed a law in 1807 banning the exporting of antiques.  The two major excavations during this time were the House of Pansa in 1810 and the Basilica from 1813-17, the director at this time was Pietro La Vega, who succeeded his brother Francesco, Alcubierre’s assistant for 15 years.

Napoleon on his Imperial Throne, Ingres, 1806

The well-known French painter Ingres was a student at the French Academy where he received the Prix-de-Rome and spent several years living in Italy. He came to the attention of Napoleon as his favorite portraitist.


Finding of Telephus, Basilica of Herculaneum, Excavated in 1760's


Ingres was obviously influenced by a  fresco with Telephus found in the Basilica of Herculaneum unearthed in the 1760’s since he copied the pose again in this portrait from 1856.  Ingres continued to paint in the Neoclassical style throughout his career.  

Madame Paul-Sigisbert Moitessier, Ingres, 1856


Excavations under the restoration Bourbon King Ferdinand I (1816-25)

When King Ferdinand returned to Naples in 1816, he now ruled as the King of the Two Sicilies. Naples was a different place after the French decade and the excavation sites were drawing a more varied crowd.  The 1820’s was another busy period in the archeological digs unearthing the Temple of Apollo, the Temple of the Fortuna Augusta and the richly decorated House of the Tragic Poet.  In particular, the latter contained paintings and mosaics with a high level of detail and emotion.


Sacrifice of Iphigenia, House of the Tragic Poet, Excavated in 1824


Excavations under 19th Century Bourbon Kings (1825-1861)

From the death of King Ferdinand in 1825 to the Italian Unification in 1861, the Bourbons (Francis I (1825-1830), Ferdinand II (1830-1859) and Francis II (1859-1861) continuously ruled Naples. Several buildings were excavated during that time, but perhaps the most significant was the largest residence found in Pompeii, The House of the Faun, excavated in 1830.  The scale and grandeur of the mosaics found there were unsurpassed.  Richly detailed scenes that were created in hundreds of thousands of tiny chips of stone lined the floors in many rooms.  


The Battle of Alexander the Great and Darius was the most impressive mosaic in a vast villa filled with them, it measured 8’9” x 16’7” (2.7 x 5.1 m) and is thought to be a copy of an original Greek painting from 310BCE. 


Battle of Issus (Alexander the Great and Darius of Persia), Floor mosaic from House of the Faun, Pompeii

19th Century Romantic Art Influenced by Pompeii

Artistically, the early 19th century saw a move towards Romanticism.  The Romantic Movement focused on sweeping emotion, a sense of theatricality, the idea of the sublime and in depicting grand historical narratives.  In other words, the subject of Pompeii was a perfect match for Romantic art. 

In this time the artistic influence shifted away from 18th century design tastes and was more focused on the tragedy of the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.


 The Last Day of Pompeii was a popular Romantic theme.  The version by Bryullov inspired one of the most popular novels at the time, The Last Days of Pompeii, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton which was published in 1834.  His novel imagined numerous fictional characters and their lives in Pompeii before they met their tragic end. 

The Last Day of Pompeii, Karl Bryullov, 1830-33

The Bulwer-Lytton novel then inspired new romanticized art based on the characters of the book such as Randolph Rogers’ Nydia.  Nydia was the heroine of the story who was able to rescue her friends when the smoke and ash of the volcano darkened the sky so much that others couldn’t see.  Since she was used to navigating the streets without sight, she was able to lead them away from the town to safety.  The Rogers’ sculpture was so popular that his sculpting studio produced over 70 copies in marble.

Nydia, Randolph Rogers, 1859, 55 inches tall, marble



Outdoor painted sketches of Pompeian ruins

The actual ruins in Pompeii were also seen as romantic and inspired the artists that visited  in the mid-19thcentury to create landscape paintings.  Landscape paintings done on location were considered in the early 19th century to be unfinished works to be used as backdrops.  However landscape paintings were becoming popular in the Romantic age, many were nostalgic views of country life created as a response to the new industrial age.  The landscapes that Pompeii inspired were also nostalgic and sought to memorialize a once great empire.

Christen Købke, The Forum, Pompeii with Vesuvius in the Distance, mid-19th century

Excavations after Italian unification

A momentous event happened in 1861, Italy was unified for the first time under the rule of King Victor Emmanuel II.  The Bourbons in Naples and other monarchs stepped down from power.


In 1863 a new Director of the Pompeii Excavations was chosen, Giuseppe Fiorelli, who introduced several modern archeological methods.  One of his most important contributions was the creation of life casts in 1863, which were done from the cavities left in the hardened volcanic matter after the victims had long since decomposed.  Plaster was injected into these cavities and the result proved to be shockingly realistic, giving archeologists new ideas of clothing, artifacts and emotional state.  

Life casts of the Pompeii victims


The new ideas of humanism and individuality of the victims invoked sympathies, and influenced a new emotional artistic style.  In particular the painter Lawrence Alma-Tadema incorporated a level of realistic detail in his work which combined elements from both Neoclassicism and Romanticism.  Though his scenes are imagined, he painstakingly recreated real objects and interiors in his paintings and focused on more intimate scenes of daily life.

Preparations for the festivities (The floral wreath) oil on canvas 54 x 69.2 cm signed c.: L. ALMA. TADEMA 1866


As of today it is estimated that only two thirds of Pompeii have been uncovered, as the final third is excavated in the years to come it will be interesting to see how the Roman Empire continues to influence society through the unearthing of this vast archeological site.



1- Harris, Judith. Pompeii Awakened: A Story of Rediscovery. London: I.B. Tauris, 2007.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Bicycle artist

Rat, Michael Wallace, 2013. The pictures are by necessity crude, and the charming wobble comes from the accuracy of GPS, which records changes of a few feet.
Michael Wallace draws pictures using his bicycle, his Samsung Galaxy smartphone, two GPS apps, and the streets of Southeast Baltimore. It’s a simple concept: his phone records his rides (the double apps are in case of crashes). In five years, he has completed nearly 500 drawing-rides.

Wallace prints out Google maps and sketches his route over them. Then he consults Google Maps Satellite View to verify that the route he’s planned actually exists. In an online interview, Wallace said he doesn’t climb or jump fences. When obstacles require changes on the fly, Wallace consults the printed map he's carrying.

Downtown Crab, Michael Wallace, 2013.
Wallace isn’t blindly following his GPS; the act of mapping out the pictures makes him memorize the route. This is analogous to what happens when an artist draws a subject before painting; he can draw it again, much faster and more expressively, because he has memorized the subject. In some way, Wallace is duplicating this drawing process, but while using his whole body.

Sailboat, Michael Wallace, 2013.
I have the same phone and a bicycle. I’m going to try this when I get back to the Duchy.

Message me if you want information about next year’s classes and workshops.

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