Wednesday, December 16, 2020

A study of Agostino Carracci's The Last Communion of Saint Jerome

The Last Communion of Saint Jerome is considered the greatest work of Agostino Carracci -- the eldest brother of Annabile Carracci and founding member of the Carracci Academy -- and a clear illustration of the Carricci philosophy in opposition to Mannerism. I evaluate the painting in this post.

The Last Communion of Saint Jerome, 1592 - 97 
Agostino Carracci

The Subject
The painting depicts the Last Communion being given to Saint Jerome by Saint Eusebius. It is based on one of three apocryphal letters from Eusebius to the Pope wherein he "recounts" the administration of the Eucharist just prior to Jerome's death.

Saint Jerome (347 - 420) was born in Dalmatia (modern-day Croatia) but moved to Rome during his teenage years. He was baptized as a Christian in Rome and, thereafter, embarked on a life of religious study, writing, translation, and ascetism. Included in his accomplishments were the roles of advisor to Pope Damasus I and the translation of the Latin Vulgate Bible (the New Testament from Greek to Latin and the Old Testament from Hebrew to Latin). Jerome relocated to Palestine on the Pope's death and set about establishing monasteries for men and and women while living, studying, and writing in his cell.

The Artist
Agostino Carracci started out as a goldsmith's apprentice but turned to painting and was trained, initially, by Prospero Fontano, and then by Passerotti and Domenico Tibaldi. He worked as a reproductive engraver in the late 1570s and visited Venice and Parma in the 1580s before returning to Bologna to aid in the founding of the Carracci Academy.

Agostino and his brother Annabile returned to Bologna tours of Northern Italian painters and collaborated with their cousin Ludovico in the formation of an academy focused on teaching art. The Carracci used the academy to "promote the idea that art should draw directly from nature for its study," an idea that was a direct refutation of Mannerism's focus on complexity and artificiality. 

The key innovation for the Carracci was the melding of the design characteristics of Florentine art with the colors of Venetian art and their naturalism into a style that was characterized by clear, simple, direct imagery. This style comported well with the guidelines established by the Council of Trent and was enthusiastically endorsed in Rome. It is thus no coincidence that the Carracci came to dominate the religious art scene and their works began to show up in many churches, chapels, and cathedrals.

They worked together on the Palazzo Fava in 1583 and the Palazzo Magnani in 1590-92.

The Painting
The painting was commissioned in 1590 by Certosa di Bologna, a former Carthusian monastery located just outside the city walls and dedicated to Saint Jerome. 

The painting is centered on a blue-and-gold-robed Saint Eusebius preparing to administer the Eucharist to an emaciated Saint Jerome who is, in turn, being supported by two monks. I have annotated the painting in the figure below in order to highlight my observations.

The Last Communion of Saint Jerome, 1592 - 97 (annotated) 
Agostino Carracci

The representation falls well within the high-renaissance tradition, in keeping with the Carracci refutation of the Mannerist style. It also adheres to the dictates of the Council of Trent by telling a religious (-associated) story simply and clearly (The apocryphal nature of the underlying story may be a departure from the Trent strictures, however.).

The picture was very naturalistic in its representation of the figures (a Carracci feature) but did not show the vibrancy of color, another attribute of their style.

Other Treatments of this Topic
Sandro Botticelli and Domenichino both painted versions of this topic.

Sandro Botticelli
Botticelli's version was painted between 1494 and 1495, 100 years prior to Carracci's effort and during the time when he was painting religious rather than mythological subjects.

The scene is set in the mid-ground of a church-like structure which is open on the side facing the viewer. As in the case of the Carracci effort, there are two groups, but the number in each group is smaller in this case. The figures in the composition, as in the Carracci case, take up about one-half of the vertical space. The composition falls within the framework of an upturned bowl. Further, Saint Jerome is attended by monks while Saint Eusebius is attended by Altar Boys. 

The symbolic candles and Cardinal's hat are included in the painting. The figure of Jesus on the Cross is almost hidden in the palm fronds jutting upwards from the altar. The painting also includes a great representation of differential textures in the fabrics between the two saints. 

The Last Communion of Saint Jerome,  1494 - 95
Sandro Botticelli

Domenichino
The Domenichino effort was painted approximately 20 years after Carracci's version. This work was commissioned by the congregation of San Girolamo and was Domenichino's first public commission for an altarpiece. He was paid 254 scudi for the effort.

There is a degree of similarity between the two paintings, some of which is masked by the differing color scheme and the reversal of the figures. 

Domenichino had been a student of the Carracci in Bologna and had traveled to Rome along with a number of other students to assist Annibale Carracci in the painting of the Farnese Gallery frescoes. One of those students -- Giovanni Lanfranco -- accused Domenichino of stealing ideas for his painting from the Carracci painting.

The Last Judgment of Saint Jerome, 1611 - 14
Domenichino

Painting Provenance
This painting was taken -- along with works by Antonio and Bartolomeo Vivarini and Ludovico Carricci -- to Paris by Napolean. Upon its repatriation, it was deposited in the Pinacoteco Nazionale.


©EverythingElse238


Sunday, December 13, 2020

Annabile Carracci and the Farnese Gallery frescoes

Palazzo Farnese, first designed for the Farnese family, and expanded when Alessandro Farnese became Pope Paul III in 1534, is one of the most important High Renaissance palaces in Rome (It currently serves as the French Embassy, having been loaned to the French for 99 years beginning in 1936.). Annabelle Carracci, founding member of the "Carracci Academy" was invited to Rome in 1594 to decorate the study of Cardinal Odoardo Farnese and to paint the ceiling of the Farnese Gallery. 

Why was Annabile invited to Rome? 

First, the Carraci had developed a new painting style which accorded with the views and objectives of the Catholic Church. The key innovation for the Carracci was the melding of the design characteristics of Florentine art with the colors of Venetian art and their naturalism into a style that was characterized by clear, simple, direct imagery. This style comported well with the guidelines established by the Council of Trent and was enthusiastically endorsed in Rome. 

Second, this new style had brought fame to the Carraci, especially Annabile. The Carracci came to dominate the religious art scene and their works began to show up in many churches, chapels, and cathedrals. They worked together, for example, on the Palazzo Fava in 1583 and the Palazzo Magnani in 1590-92.

Third, connections. According to Vodret and Granata (Not only Caravaggio), "Even though (Pope) Innocent ruled for only two months (ed., November 3 to December 31, 1591), he found time to develop closer ties with Alessandro Farnese and Paolo Emilio Sfondrati, who were, as Morselli observes, very important points of reference in the careers of Annibale Caracci and Guido Reni."

Annibale traveled to Rome in 1595 and decorated a small chamber called Sala d'Ercole rather than the study. In 1597 he was commissioned to decorate the barrel-vaulted gallery on the palace's main floor. The frescoes were ordered in celebration of the wedding between Ranuccio Farnese and Pope Clemente VIIIs niece Margherita Aldobrandini. The contract allowed for food-related expenses to be deducted from the overall contract cost. The design called for mythical figures -- rather than the religious scenes that were more in vogue at that time -- in order to comport with the Farnese antique art collection.

Annabile invited his brother and cousin to join him in Rome to work on the commission. Ludovico was comfortable working with the students at the Academy in Bologna and opted to remain there. His elder brother Agostino joined him but they could not get along so he left.

The work was created in large part between 1597 and 1601 but was not finalized until 1608. According to Vodret and Granata:

Annibale painted the vault of the gallery with "various emblems representing war and peace between sacred and profane love as described by Plato" ... mythological scenes were inserted into a fictive architectural framework that combines marvelously sculptural and naturalistic elements, medallions, and framed pictures that represent a joyful series of stories about the loves of the gods, culminating in the nuptial scene the Triumph of Bacchus and Ariadne. Ingeniously inspired by Michelangelo's ceiling in the Sistine chapel, Carracci's vault is a festive counterpoint, and with its luminous colors, and the naturalistic handling of fleshy figures and airy horizons, it points to the exuberant expressivity of the Baroque.

Selected aspects of the frescoes are shown in the following frames.

The Loves of The Gods on the vaults of the Farnese Gallery
Annabile Carracci, 1597 - 1601

Farnese Gallery, 1597 - 1608
Annabile Carracci and studio

Farnese Gallery, 1597 - 1608
Annabile Carracci and studio
The Triumph of Bacchus and Ariadne, 1597 - 1608
Annabile Carracci and studio
Polyphemus and Galatea, 1597 - 1608
Annabile Carracci and studio

According to Vodret and Granata,
The frescoes on the gallery walls (1602-3), which are connected thematically to the ceiling, were painted by Carracci's excellent students, including Domenichino and Lanfranco. These and the other Bolognese artists who came to Rome to study with Annabile and to work with his shop achieved what was almost a monopoly on all the large-scale fresco commissions in Roman villas, palaces, and churches in the first decades of the seventeenth century.

In this effort Annibale "introduced a new grand manner of fresco painting" which was "ranked  alongside The Sistine Chapel and Raphael Rooms as the greatest achievement of monumental fresco painting. This new style paved the way for the new idiom of Baroque painting" (visual-arts-cork.com). The unveiling of the ceiling in 1601 brought great acclaim and demand for Annabile's work.

Most painters working in Rome at that time were either flashy, or aggressive, or both. Annabile was neither. He was rather retiring and a poor dresser. The Cardinal did not approve of his demeanor and looks and was very disrespectful to him during the course of the project. Annibale did not take visible offence and kept his head down and the work going. The culmination of the effort was too much for him to bear though. At the completion of the effort the Cardinal subtracted the food costs and paid Annibale a paltry sum.  Annibale fell into a deep depression as a result and ceased painting. Rather, he would do sketches which would then serve as the basis for paintings from his students. Annibale died in 1609.

©EverythingElse238

Wednesday, December 9, 2020

The roots of the anti-Mannerist, proto-Baroque, Bolognese School (1590 - 1630)

The Council of Trent (1545 - 1563), in its attempts to blunt the effects of the Protestant Reformation, issued a number of decrees, including one which welcomed religious imagery as an aid in religious teaching. According to witcombe.sbc.edu, the religious imagery employed in this manner was expected to exhibit:

  • Clarity, simplicity, and intelligibility 
  • Realistic interpretation
  • Emotionally stimulate piety.
While the church was open to the use of painted works to communicate religious messages to the masses, it did not conceive of the then-dominant painting style -- Mannerism -- as being up to the task. Post-1550 Mannerism exhibited (witcombe.sbc.edu):

  • Virtuosity of execution and highly decorative surface qualities go with compositional decentralization and spatial and coloristic complexities
  • Deliberate physical and psychic ambiguities puzzle the beholder
  • Intricacies of handling are often matched by the intricacies of content
  • Many pictures and fresco cycles of the period are obscure and esoteric 
  • Little power to stir religious emotions in the mass of the faithful
  • Lacked clarity, realism, and emotional intensity.
The images below show the difference between Correggio's Noli Me Tangere -- done in the High Renaissance style -- versus the Mannerist representation by Bronzino. 

Noli me Tangere, c. 1525
Antonia da Correggio

Noli me Tangere, 1561
Agnolo Bronzino

Painting in the Late Mannerist style (1550 - 1580) represented "an extraordinary decline in quality" from the High Renaissance. The movement which stepped into the breach was the Bolognese School (c.1590 - 1630), an "anti-Mannerist" art movement founded by the Bolognese-based Carracci family. "Ludovico Carracci and his cousins led the charge in the greatest reform of artistry since Cimabue and Giotto, and the first reactionary art Revolution in Western Art History" (The Carracci and Caravaggio Revolution: Foundations of the Baroque, forums.civfanatics.com). Lets take a look at the family and the fruits of their activities.

The Carracci
Ludovico was the oldest of the trio that included him and his two cousins: Annabile and Agostino. Ludovico was initially apprenticed to the painter Prospero Fontano who, after some time, sought to dissuade him from pursuing that career track because he did not "have the nature for it." Ludovico was not dissuaded, however, and went off to study on his own, traveling through North and Central Italy to study the works of Renaissance painters such as Andrea del Sarto (Florence), Parmagiannino (Parma), Giulio Romano (Mantua), and Titian and Tintoretto ( Enice).

Annibale Caracci's father was a tailor in Bologna. Due to the family's financial circumstances, Annibale was forced to leave school at the age of 11 to begin an apprenticeship with a goldsmith. His training while there included learning to draw and it soon became apparent that he was very talented; so much so that his apprenticeship was switched to the Mannerist painter Bartolomeo Passerotti.

In 1580, Annibale took off on a study tour of northern Italy, stopping in Correggio's studio in Parma and then moving on to Venice where he met up with his brother Agostino. In Venice they studied the works of the painters Titian, Veronese, Giorgione, and Tintoretto and marveled at their mastery of color and light. 

Agostino also started out as a goldsmith's apprentice but turned to painting and was trained, initially, by Prospero Fontano, and then by Passerotti and Domenico Tibaldi. He worked as a reproductive engraver in the late 1570s and visited Venice and Parma in the 1580s before returning to Bologna to aid in the founding of the Carracci Academy.

The Carracci Academy
The Carracci brothers returned to Bologna and collaborated with their cousin Ludovico in the formation of an academy focused on teaching art. The Carracci used the academy to "promote the idea that art should draw directly from nature for its study," and idea that was a direct refutation of Mannerism's focus on complexity and artificiality. The genesis of the school is illustrated in the chart below.

The key innovation for the Carracci was the melding of the design characteristics of Florentine art with the colors of Venetian art and their naturalism into a style that was characterized by clear, simple, direct imagery. This style comported well with the guidelines established by the Council of Trent and was enthusiastically endorsed in Rome. It is thus no coincidence that the Carracci came to dominate the religious art scene and their works began to show up in many churches, chapels, and cathedrals.

They worked together on the Palazzo Fava in 1583 and the Palazzo Magnani in 1590-92. In 1594 Cardinal Farnese invited Annibale to Rome to work on Palazzo Farnese and commissioned him in 1597 to work on the frescoes for the Gallery. He was joined by Agostino for this effort.


Lamentation of Christ, c. 1582
Ludovico Carracci

Annunciation
Ludovico Carracci

Madonna and Child with Saints, 1586
Agostino Carracci

The Lamentation, 1586
Agostino Carracci

The Butcher’s Shoo, 1583
Annibale Carracci

The Bean eater, 1580 - 1590
Annibale Carracci

Rest on the Flight into Egypt, 1600
Annibale Carracci

Pieta, 1599 - 1600
Annibale Carracci

Landscape with Flight into Egypt, 1604
Annibale Carracci

In his trial in Rome, Caravaggio identified Annibile as one of the 10 best artists in Rome at that time. And it is easy to see why. in addition to his life studies and drawings, Annibale was accomplished in frescoes, a style that evaded Caravvagio. In addition, Annabelle was accomplished in genre scenes and landscapes.

In future posts I will explore the Farnese Gallery frescoes, the legacy of the Carraccis, and the role of the Carracci students in the overall influence and impact of The Bolognese School.


©EverythingElse238

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Catholic Counter-Reformation Art (1560 - 1700)

The Catholic Church had been set back on its heels by the Protestant Reformation -- the "16th-Century religious, political, intellectual, and cultural upheaval that splintered Catholic Europe" (history.com) -- and responded with the Council of Trent (1545 - 1563) and its decrees countering the Reformist agenda.


One of the areas addressed by the Council was art and its role in Catholic Christian life. The dominant style of art at that time was Mannerism but Catholic leaders found this style to be lacking in pious appeal. Religious art of the time, according to the Church:
  • Had lost its focus on religious subject matter
  • Was too much focused on decorative qualities 
  • Was too influenced by classical pagan art.
Examples of this diminished focus on religious subjects, and elevation of style, are demonstrated in Parmigianino's Madonna of the Long Neck and Pontormi's The Deposition.

Madonna of the Long Neck
Parmigianino, 1530 - 33

The Deposition from the Cross
Jacopo Pontormi, 1525 - 28

Michelangelo's The Last Judgement "... came under persistent attack in the Counter-Reformation for, among other things, nudity (later painted over for several centuries), not showing Christ seated or bearded, and including the pagan figure of Charon" (Wikipedia).

The Last Judgment, 1534 - 41
Michelangelo

The interpretations of the art-related dictates issuing from the Council of Trent were as follows:

  • Art was to be direct and compelling in its narrative presentation
  • It was to provide an accurate presentation  of the biblical narrative of the saints' lives, rather than adding anecdotal and imaginary moments
  • It was the duty of all painters to proclaim and explain the truths of the Catholic religion.

Scipione Pulzone's Lamentation was viewed as a work that gave "a clear demonstration of what the holy council was striving for in the new style of religious art ... the focus of the painting giving direct attention to the crucifixion of Christ, it complies with the religious content of the of the council and shows the story of the passion while keeping Christ in the image of the ideal human" (Wikipedia).

Lamentation, 1589
Scipione Pulzone

The Church, the newly formed Jesuits, and wealthy individuals began commissioning works to support this new direction and were provided strong support in Italy, Spain and its colonies (Flanders and Naples), and southern Germany. This new direction is reflected beginning with the efforts of the Bolognese School which itself became a forerunner of the Baroque. I will cover The Bolognese School in my next post on this topic.

©EverythingElse238

    Sunday, November 15, 2020

    Orazio Gentileschi: The life and art of a transitory Carravagiste

    In an earlier piece on this blog I detailed how the Caravaggisti thread flowed through Italian adherents to Utrecht, carried there by Dutch painters returning from sojourns in Rome. In this series, I will cycle back to the Italian Caravaggistis, beginning with Orazio Gentileschi.

    Portrait of Orazio Gentileschi, c. 1630
    Lucas Emil Vorsterman after Sir Anthony van Dyck

    Orazio was born in Pisa in 1563, son to a Florentine Goldsmith named Giovanni Battista Lomi. He moved to Rome in either 1576 or 1578 and took up residence with a maternal uncle whose surname -- Gentileschi -- he adopted.

    There is no widely accepted account as to how Orazio acquired his painting skills. His first mention as a painter was as part of a team of artists decorating the Vatican Library in the period 1588 - 1589. He subsequently worked with the landscape painter Agostino Tassi painting frescos in the churches of Santa Maria Maggiore, San Giovanni Laterano, and Santo Nicolosi in Carcere. This work ran from 1590 - 1600 and Orazio probably contributed figures for Tassi's landscapes.

    During this period Orazio was considered a "competent but undistinguished practitioner of the dominant late maniera style."

    San Giovanni dei Fiorentino --Interior 
    Attributed to Orazio Gentileschi

    San Giovanni dei Fiorentino --Interior 
    Attributed to Orazio Gentileschi

    Exposure to Caravaggio's works led to major changes in Orazio's life and painting styles. According to Keith Christiansen and Judith W. Mann (Orazio and Artemisia Genteleschi, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY, 2001):

    Orazio's encounter with Caravaggio in the summer of 1600 was the central event of his life. Prior to the unveiling of Caravaggio's canvases showing the calling and martyrdom of Saint Matthew (ed., see below) in the French national church of San Luigi dei Francesi, which created a sensation by making the Lombard artist's work publicly visible for the first time, Orazio had painted in a style that was predicated on compromise and accommodation. His figures were types, his composition conventional; his color was slack. There is a blandness, an anonymity, and a disturbing lack of conviction to his work of the 1590s that comes (sic) as a shock to those who know only his distinctive, post-Caravaggesque pictures.

    The Calling of St Matthew, 1599-1600
    Caravaggio

    The Martyrdom of St. Matthew, 1599-1600
    Caravaggio

    Orazio became a close associate of Caravaggio, and "unexpected and bold" development in that he was married, the father of four kids, and, at 37 years of age, 11 years older than the oldest of the followers. That being said, his paintings post-1600 began to incorporate elements of the Caravaggio approach (NGA, Christiansen and Mann):

    • Use of models
    • Dramatic lighting
    • Simplified compositional structures with a restricted number of figures close to the picture plane
    • Use of dramatic, unconventional gestures and monumental composition
    • Uncompromising realism and contemporary representation of figure types.
    In the paintings immediately following, Orazio's movement away from Mannerism and incorporation of Caravaggic elements are on full display.

    St Francis supported by an Angel, c. 1603
    Orazio Gentileschi

    David and Goliath, 1605 - 1607
    Orazio Gentileschi

    Circumcision of Christ, c. 1605 - 1610
    Orazio Gentileschi

    St Michael and the Devil, 1607 - 1608
    Orazio Gentileschi

    R. Ward Bissel (Bulletin of the Detroit Institute of Arts, 1967) saw the foregoing paintings as Orazio seeking to find his own way of expressing Caravaggism: "Having explored these alternatives, Gentileschi chose to work towards increased refinement of sentiment and of pictorial effects, and, in so doing established himself as the most original painter among the Roman Caravaggeschi."  Young Woman with a Violin characterizes this moment. It is pure Caravaggio in the placement of a single figure against a dark background with the individual illuminated by an intense light.

    Young Woman with a Violin, c. 1612
    Orazio Gentileschi

    It was during this period that Orazio formed a relationship with the painter Agostino Tassi to collaborate on the frescos in the Casino delle Muse for Cardinal Scipione and in the Sala del Consistorio in the Quirinale Palace. The partnership came to a scandalous end when Orazio accused Tassi of "deflowering" his daughter (and student) Artemisia.

    Following the scandal, Orazio actively began seeking work outside of Rome. This led to commissions in Fabriano in 1616-17 and he then accepted the invitation of a Genoese nobleman to work for him in that city. He resided in Genoa from 1621 - 1623. Post that period he became primarily a court painter, traveling to Paris to work with the court of Marie de Medici (1624 - 1626) and then on to the court of Charles I in London. He died in London in 1639.

    Somewhere around 1615 his painting style also changed. According to the National Gallery of Art, he "developed a Tuscan lyricism foreign to Caravaggio's almost brutal vitality" and this was reflected in a lighter palette and a more precise treatment reminiscent of his Mannerist beginnings. In the NGA article, Sydney Freedberg is quoted thusly: "Orazio passed beyond dependence on the art of Caravaggio into a powerful and highly personal style, for which the prior assimilation of Caravaggio was a threshold." His masterpiece -- Annunciation -- was created during this post-Caravaggio period.

    Annunciation, c. 1623
    Orazio Gentileschi

    Even though Orazio backslid, he still enjoys special prominence when discussions arise re Caravaggisti active in the first two decades of the 17th century. He was the first to respond to the shift but he also influenced others, notably Bartolomeo Lavarozzi (1590 - 1625), Orazio Riminaldi (1593 - 1630), and Giovann Francesco Guerreiri (1589 - 1655/1659), Italians all. He also influenced Hendrik Terbruggen who the took the style back to Utrecht. But, by far, his most prominent student was his daughter Artemisi who I will cover in my next post in this series.

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    Wednesday, September 23, 2020

    The Utrecht Caravaggists

    Earlier Low-Country art movements such as the Romanists and Haarlem Mannerists resulted from local artists traveling to Rome and bringing back their learnings to their home markets. Such also was the case for Utrecht Caravaggism, the subject of the current post. I have laid the foundation with earlier posts on Caravaggio and Caravaggism.

    Utrecht
    At 40% Catholic in the middle of the 17th Century, Utrecht was the most Catholic of the cities in the United Provinces. And that percentage was even higher if only the elite were evaluated. The city was, however, a key part of a Protestant republic and played important roles in both the Dutch War of Independence (1568 - 1648) and the Thirty-Year War (1618 - 48).

    With the resumption of hostilities between the Dutch Republic and Spain, Utrecht was a city in turmoil. In addition to the never-ending troop movement, the religious authorities clamped down on the city's 30,000 inhabitants, forbidding:
    • Public celebration of Catholic feast days
    • Dancing
    • Loud music in taverns and homes
    • Drinking
    • Gambling
    • Sports and games
    • Gathering of unmarried youth
    Utrecht Caravaggism
    This "painting school" encompasses those Dutch Baroque artists who were influenced by Caravaggism while in Rome in the 1610s and upon their return to Utrecht, developed works in the Caravaggisti style. Key players in this drama were Hendrick ter Brugghen, Dirck van Baburen, and Gerard van Honthorst.  

    They became known as Caravaggisti because they adopted Caravaggio's:
    • Strong sense of light
    • Dramatic contrast between light and dark
    • Focus on emotionally charged subject matter.
    Hendrick ter Brugghen
    Hendrick ter Brugghen began to study painting in the studio of Abraham Bloemaert at the age of 13. At 15, he travelled to Italy, returning to Utrecht in 1614 (It is thought that he made a second trip to Italy in the 1620/1621 timeframe.). In Rome, ter Brugghen came into contact with, and was influenced by, the paintings of Caravaggio. On his return to Utrecht he painted in the studio of Gerrit van Honthhorst who became one of his key collaborators in standing up this new painting style.

    Hendrick ter Bruggen
    P. Bodart

    Ter Brugghen painted genre scenes of musicians and drunks as well as biblical and mythological scenes. He came to be known as the leading painter in the group and this was reflected in the commissions that came his way as well as the adulation that he received from fellow painters. Rubens famously described his work as "... above that of all the other Utrecht artists."

    A selection of his works are presented below.

    Unequal Couple, c. 1623
    Hendrick ter Bruggen

    Esau Selling his Birthright, 1625
    Hendrick ter Bruggen


    The Concert, 1627
    Hendrick ter Bruggen

    Dirck van Baburen
    Dirch van Baburen (1595 - 1624) studied painting in Utrecht under the watchful eye of the "competetnt academic artist" Paulus Moreelse and then spent the years between 1612 and 1620 in Italy. Van Baburen did have some success in Italy but much of the work that he did hewed closely to the Caravaggio line. For example, see van Baburen's The Entombment when compared with Caravaggio's.

    The Entombment, 1601 - 1604
    Caravaggio

    The Entombment, 1617
    Dirck van Baburen

    Van Baburen returned to Utrecht in 1620 and shared a studio a studio with ter Bruggen from 1622 to 1623. The continuing influence of Caravaggio on his style, especially in the use of light and shadow, is illustrated in his painting Crowning of Jesus Christ with Thorns.

    Crowning of Jesus Christ with Thorns, 1622
    Dirck van Baburen

    He was especially fond of genre scenes (see The Procuress, below) and Caravaggio's zoom-in effect, portraying half-length subjects filling the picture also inspired Baburen's dramatic compositions.

    The Procuress, after 1623
    Dirck van Baburen

    Man Playing a Jew's Harp, 1621
    Dirck van Baburen

    He was the least known of the Caravaggistis but his pictures appear in the background of two Vermeer paintings: Lady Seated at a Virginal and The Concert.

    Lady Seated at a Virginal, 1670 - 72
    Johannes Vermeer

    The Concert, 1665 - 66
    Johannes Vermeer

    Gerrit van Honthorst
    Like Hendrick ter Brugghen, Gerrit van Hanthorst (1592 - 1656) was trained in the studio of Abraham Bloemaert.

    Gerrit van Honthorst

    He went to Italy and, while there, "copied the naturalism and eccentricities" of Caravaggio. While working there he earned the moniker Gerard of the Night Scenes due to his proclivity for painting night scenes, many lit by a single candle whose direct flame was obscured form the viewer by one of the models.

    The Procuress
    Gerrit van Honthorst

    He came back to Utrecht in 1620 where he set up a studio which did very well. Ter Brugghen painted out of this studio for a couple of years.

    According to rijksmuseum.nl, "Honthorst's works are numerous, and amply represented in English and Continental galleries. His most attractive pieces are those in which he cultivates the style of Caravaggio, those, namely, which represent taverns, with players, singers and eaters. He shows great skill in reproducing scenes illuminated by a single candle, amply employing the style of chiaroscuro."

    The Concert, 1623
    Gerrit van Honthorst

    Soon after his return to Utrecht, van Honthorst abandoned the Caravaggiste style for a "much lighter palette" and went on to gain great renown for his portraits for the Royal and noble families of Europe.

    Legacy
    These painters were active in isolation in Utrecht and their very un-Dutch works were overlooked for a very long time. For example, ter Brugghen was really only recognized as a great painter in the middle of the 20th-century and is nowadays regarded as the most important of the three.

    In general there is more interest in these painters and their movement because:
    • There is now a realization that they formed an important link between Caravaggio's Italian Baroque and Dutch painters such as Rembrandt (clair-obscur), Fran Hals (genre pieces), and Vermeer (use of color).
    • They set the tone for later artists who were inspired by Caravaggio, artists such as Georges de la Tour (Lorraine) and Jan  Janssen.
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    In the Footsteps of Piero della Francesca: Meetup and the Maddalena

    Piero della Francesca's import to pre-Renaissance art and how I became involved in a trip to walk in his footsteps have previously bee...