tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3497732453794917437.post2121533416587874940..comments2024-02-23T00:48:15.148-08:00Comments on Chris F. Westbury: On Caravaggio As (Like Duchamp) An Artist of TimeChris F. Westburyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06541200827705876123noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3497732453794917437.post-52786738502726521022019-08-23T21:39:01.001-07:002019-08-23T21:39:01.001-07:00The capture of the moment of deep emotion in art, ...The capture of the moment of deep emotion in art, such as in Caravaggio's Boy Bitten by a Lizard, is also to be found in some of the classical Greek works. The sculpture of Polyphemus about to be blinded from Tiberius' grotto at Sperlonga, and (a Roman work) the firm, yet rising, stance of Augustus in the Prima Porta portrait are examples of the capture of the capture of the instantaneous (but also substantial) moment. Nigel Spivey wove this (Hellenistic)/Imperial mastery of the representation of the intense and instantaneous as a theme in his television series.<br /> The rediscovery in 1506 of the statue of Laocoon and His Sons has been credited, rightly, as a major stimulus of Michelangelo's serpentine sinuosity in his later art. But the faces of the priest and his sons are also portraits of instantaneous emotion, of the realisation that they are being crushed by fate.<br /> In his analysis of classical art, the pioneering art historian-theoretician Winckelmann used as an illuminating example Niobe changed to stone to stop, and preserve, the grief caused by the death of her children, killed by Apollo and Artemis.<br /> Nonetheless, it is only in the (very) late Renaissance that Anguissola and Caravaggio, in particular, find, refine, and refound the representation of instantaneous emotion in the plastic arts.<br /> From the observations by our blogspot author, Chris Westbury, we could start to look at other aspects, such as how the chiaroscuro in Caravaggio's work can start to show and shadow doubles of emotions - pain and parental concern in several of the examples mentioned above, and pain and sexual, gently orgasmic pleasure in Caravaggio's portraits of his rent boys. And then there are partial histories of modern art springing from this. GREG Bird Greg Birdhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01790271646705001102noreply@blogger.com