Caravaggio
Sgarbi Vittorio
Skira
English Text.
Milano, 2007; paperback, pp. 208, 72 col. ill., cm 16,5x24.
(Arte Antica. Cataloghi).
series: Arte Antica. Cataloghi
ISBN: 88-7624-859-5 - EAN13: 9788876248597
Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture),Monographs (Painting and Drawing),Painting
Period: 1400-1800 (XV-XVIII) Renaissance
Languages:
Weight: 0.742 kg
Art critic, historian, writer, TV presenter, politician and professional provocateur, Vittorio Sgarbi is a prominent figure in Italy's cultural landscape. Controversial, often caustic, and always charismatic, his thought-provoking opinions and writings leave no room for indifference. In this highly-readable and well-informed book, Sgarbi covers the life and works of Caravaggio, analysing the genius' disordered and adventurous existence and the revolutionary greatness of his masterpieces.
As Vittorio Sgarbi writes in the book: "The life and work of an artist always end up looking alike; but in Caravaggio's life there was a sense of fun, an enjoyment of burlesque and a lack of propriety that is not reflected even in his in most daring works, though this can be explained through a radical renewal in his thinking which was foreign to any intemperance. In Caravaggio, we had the cohabitation of a sophisticated, cultured intellectual capable of imprinting an ideal turning point in the course of history and the principal character of an adventure story-quarrelsome, overbearing, to put it in one word cursed-as he was portrayed in romantic interpretations. On the other hand, his intemperance cannot be ascribed to the spirit of the times, behaviour that we would call extravagant today but was instead common in such violent and difficult times... Indeed Caravaggios behaviour was considered unusual by his contemporaries, especially considering the traditional role played by artists. The true greatness of Caravaggio lay in his having shown the other, and indeed authentic side of reality. But these are external elements, psychological reflections that pass from life into art."