LONDON — Darkness … gentle and darkish … gentle and darkish together … chiaroscuro. These phrases sprang to thoughts the second I stepped into Gallery 46 of the Nationwide Gallery. Why? As a result of the gallery itself, which is exhibiting what is alleged to be Caravaggio’s final portray, was so darkish that the air felt thick with tar.
Fortunately, two factors of illumination immediately forward of me guided my means ahead, like a pilgrim to a shrine: two work by Caravaggio himself, lit by greater than the mysterious lighting of the work themselves.
Caravaggio, as a painter and a person, was a mix of sunshine and darkish. In enthusiastic about him, we’re pressured to accommodate each the burden of the work that he made and the burden of his fascinating and troubled, if not harmful and violent, brief life. The very the thought of the artist — a assassin on the run from the authorities for 4 years — is heavy with the grating, knife-edge expectation of violence and gruesomeness and tragedy, particularly the late work.
And what higher a means for him to point out this off than by mastering chiaroscuro, by taking part in so deftly, again and again, with the very thought of rising from the shadows? He excelled at chiaroscuro gentle rising from darkish, or maybe gentle in slippery and infrequently theatrical mixture with darkish, and the interaction of those two extremes. He did this to create palpable atmospheres: night time and hushedness, the close to strangulating warmth and reek of intimacy, the secrecy of likelihood assignations.
Simply two work are on this present. Each had been made pretty late; each are in perplexed mourning over their material; and each emerge from darkish locations. In “Salome Receives the Head of John the Baptist” (c. 1609–10), an uncouth executioner with a battered face — Caravaggio too as soon as took a horrible battering to his face, badly disfiguring it, in a battle — grasps a severed head on a platter by a clump of hair. His left hand rests on the crossbar of his sword, the weapon of selection. The ghastly jaundice-yellow of the useless prophet’s face is sufficient to make any onlooker gasp. The executioner’s gesture and expression are brutally matter-of-fact — in spite of everything, he’s knowledgeable — whereas Salome can’t bear to look within the head’s course, or to ponder the truth that her airily expressed want (prompted by her mom) to have John the Baptist’s head parted from his physique and served up this manner ought to have been granted with such ease. An previous lady leans over the shoulder of Salome, pained, bewildered, arms tightly clasped, cheeks shriveled. Every of the three figures (in addition to the top) is individually lit. As if chanced upon accidentally, freshly emerged from the shadows, they appear to say: ponder this grisly scene.
“The Martyrdom of St. Ursula” (1610) is darker nonetheless, and a way more sophisticated, messy, and feverish composition — a crowding of partly lit our bodies thrown and squeezed towards one another, the gripping and greedy of arms. A saintly gesture is at its middle, a cupping of arms whose which means emerges solely by shut trying.
St. Ursula is staring downward — first noticeable is the dazzle and shapely swelling of the crimson material at her waist, and the way in which she has caught it up in order that it appears to rise in swish folds. A rich previous man to the left lunges ahead, thrusting out his left arm protectively. A soldier, outlined by the gleam of lit metallic on his sleeve and helmet, leans in from the proper. A bearded younger man (Caravaggio himself; he has positioned himself at middle of his painted drama) seems to be throughout her shoulder, open-mouthed. It’s all too late. The arrow has discovered its house.
St. Ursula, although pallid, seems to be curiously serene, as if she is considering an inevitability. Rays of sunshine sanctify the scene.
Three weeks after finishing this portray, Caravaggio was useless. Giovanni Baglione, writing in 1642, provides us the information of his dying: “… in desperation he began out alongside the seaside underneath the warmth of the July solar, making an attempt to catch sight of the vessel that had his belongings. Lastly, he got here to a spot the place he was put to mattress with a raging fever; and so, with out the help of God or man, in just a few days he died, as miserably as he had lived.”
The Final Caravaggio continues on the Nationwide Gallery (Trafalgar Sq., London, England) by means of July 21. The exhibition was curated by Francesca Whitlum-Cooper.