Sistine Madonna

Sistine Madonna
Artist Raphael
Year 1512
Type Oil on canvas
Dimensions 265 cm × 196 cm (104 in × 77 in)
Location Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden

Sistine Madonna, also called La Madonna di San Sisto, is an oil painting by the Italian artist Raphael. Commissioned in 1512 by Pope Julius II as an altarpiece for the church of San Sisto, Piacenza, it was one of the last Madonnas painted by the artist. Relocated to Dresden from 1754, the well-known painting has been particularly influential in Germany. After World War II, it was relocated to Moscow for a decade before it was returned to Germany. There, it resides as one of the central pieces in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister. The painting has been highly praised by many notable critics, and Giorgio Vasari called it "a truly rare and extraordinary work".[1]

Composition

The painting, oil on canvas, measures 265 cm by 196 cmn.[2] In the painting the Madonna, holding the Christ Child and flanked by Saint Sixtus and Saint Barbara, stands on clouds before dozens of obscured cherubs, while two distinctive winged cherubs rest on their elbows beneath her.[3][4][5][6]

Painting materials

Pigment analysis of Raphael's masterpiece[7][8] reveals the usual pigments of the renaissance period such as malachite mixed with orpiment in the green drapery on top of the painting, natural ultramarine mixed with lead white in the blue robe of Madonna and a mixture of lead-tin-yellow, vermilion and lead white in the yellow sleeve of St Barbara.

History

One of the artist's last Madonnas, the painting was commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1512[9][10] in honor of his late uncle, Pope Sixtus IV, as an altarpiece for the Benedictine basilica of the Monastery of San Sisto, Piacenza, a church with which the Rovere family had a long-standing relationship.[11] It was their requirement that the image contain both Saint Sixtus and Saint Barbara.[6] Legend has it that when Antonio da Correggio first laid eyes on the piece, he was inspired to cry, "And I also, I am a painter!"[12]

The painting moves to Germany

In 1754, Augustus III of Poland purchased the painting for 110,000 – 120,000 francs, whereupon it was relocated to Dresden and achieved new prominence;[12][13][14] this was to remain the highest price paid for any painting for many decades. In 2001's The Invisible Masterpiece, Hans Belting and Helen Atkins describe the influence the painting has had in Germany:

Like no other work of art, Raphael's Sistine Madonna in Dresden has fired the Germans' imagination, uniting or dividing them in the debate about art and religion.... Over and again, this painting has been hailed as 'supreme among the world's paintings' and accorded the epithet 'divine'....[15]

If the stories are correct, the painting achieved its prominence immediately, as it's said that Augustus moved his throne in order to better display it.[12] The Sistine Madonna was notably celebrated by Johann Joachim Winckelmann in his popular and influential Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums (1764), positioning the painting firmly in the public view and in the center of a debate about the relative prominence of its Classical and Christian elements.[16] Alternately portraying Raphael as a "devout Christian" and a "'divine' Pagan" (with his distinctly un-Protestant Mary who could have as easily been Juno), the Germans implicitly tied the image into a legend of their own, "Raphael's Dream."[17] Arising in the last decades of the 18th century, the legend—which made its way into a number of stories and even a play—presents Raphael as receiving a heavenly vision that enabled him to present his divine Madonna.[18] The legend itself inspired considerable passion in the painting's audiences, some of whom (including one of Freud's patients) were transported to a state of religious ecstasy by the sight of it, and created of the painting an unlikely icon of romanticism.[19] The picture influenced Goethe, Wagner and Nietzsche[20] According to Dostoyevsky, the painting was "the greatest revelation of the human spirit".[21] In 1855, the "Neues Königliches Museum" (New Royal Museum) opened in a building designed by Gottfried Semper, and the Sistine Madonna was given a room of its own.[22]

World War II and Soviet possession

Sistine Madonna was rescued from destruction during the bombing of Dresden in World War II,[20] but the conditions in which it was saved and the subsequent history of the piece are themselves the subject of controversy. The painting was stored, with other works of art, in a tunnel in Saxon Switzerland; when the Red Army encountered them, they took them.[23] The painting was temporarily removed to Pillnitz, from which it was transported in a box on a tented flatcar to Moscow. There, sight of the Madonna brought Soviet leading art official Mikhail Khrapchenko to declare that the Pushkin Museum would now be able to claim a place among the great museums of the world.[24]

In 1946, the painting went temporarily on restricted exhibition in the Pushkin, along with some of the other treasures the Soviets had retrieved.[25] But in 1955, after the death of Joseph Stalin, the Soviets decided to return the art to Germany, "for the purpose of strengthening and furthering the progress of friendship between the Soviet and German peoples."[23][25] There followed some international controversy, with press around the world stating that the Dresden art collection had been damaged in Soviet storage.[23] Soviets countered that they had in fact saved the pieces. The tunnel in which the art was stored in Saxon Switzerland was climate controlled, but according to a Soviet military spokesperson, the power had failed when the collection was discovered and the pieces were exposed to the humid conditions of the underground.[23][26]

Stories of the horrid conditions from which the Sistine Madonna had been saved began to circulate.[23] But, as reported by ARTnews in 1991, Russian art historian Andrei Chegodaev, who had been sent by the Soviets to Germany in 1945 to review the art, denied it:

It was the most insolent, bold-faced lie.... In some gloomy, dark cave, two [actually four] soldiers, knee-deep in water, are carrying the Sistine Madonna upright, slung on cloths, very easily, barely using two fingers. But it couldn’t have been lifted like this even by a dozen healthy fellows . . . because it was framed. . . . Everything connected with this imaginary rescue is simply a lie.[23]

ARTnews also indicated that the commander of the brigade that retrieved the Madonna also described the stories as "a lie", in a letter to Literaturnaya Gazeta published in the 1950s, indicating that "in reality, the ‘Sistine Madonna,’ like some other pictures, ...was in a dry tunnel, where there were various instruments that monitored humidity, temperature, etc."[23] But, whether true or not, the stories had found foothold in public imagination and have been recorded as fact in a number of books.

Contemporary display

After its return to Germany, the painting was restored to display in the Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, where guidebooks single it out in the collection, variously describing it as the "most famous",[27] the "top",[28] the "showpiece",[29] and "the collection's highlight".[30] From 26 May to 26 August 2012, the Dresden gallery celebrated the 500th anniversary of the painting.[31][32]

Cherubim

Detail, Sistine Madonna

A prominent element within the painting, the winged angels beneath Mary are famous in their own right. As early as 1913 Gustav Kobbé declared that "no cherub or group of cherubs is so famous as the two that lean on the altar top indicated at the very bottom of the picture."[33] Heavily marketed, they have been featured in stamps, postcards, T-shirts, and wrapping paper.[34] These cherubim have inspired legends of their own. According to a 1912 article in Fra Magazine, when Raphael was painting the Madonna the children of his model would come in to watch. Struck by their posture as they did, the story goes, he added them to the painting exactly as he saw them.[35] Another story, recounted in 1912's St. Nicholas Magazine, says that Raphael rather was inspired by two children he encountered on the street when he saw them "looking wistfully into the window of a baker's shop."[36] prompting the neologism Sitonna

Notes

  1. Raphael, Masters Collections., The Masterpieces: Sistine Madonna
  2. Thomas Puttfarken (2000). The Discovery of Pictorial Composition: Theories of Visual Order in Painting 1400-1800. Yale University Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-300-08156-5.
  3. Sweetser, Moses Foster (1877). Raphael. J.R. Osgood and company. p. 120. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  4. Gilman, Daniel Coit; Harry Thurston Peck; Frank Moore Colby (1903). "Raphael Santi". The New International Encyclopædia 13. Dodd, Mead and Company. p. 823. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  5. Huneker, James (1913). Pictures We Love to Live With ... The associated newspaper school. p. 4. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Gruyer, F.A. (1905). "The Sistine Madonna". In Esther Singleton. Great paintings as seen and described by great writers. Dodd, Mead and company. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-4099-4570-3. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  7. Weber, K-H. Die Sixtinische Madonna, Maltechnik-Restauro, 90, 4 1984, 9-28
  8. Raphael, Sistine Madonna, colourlex.com
  9. Angelo Walther, Raffael, Die Sixtinische Madonna. 2nd edition. Leipzig: Seemann, 2004.
  10. Andreas Henning, Die Sixtinische Madonna von Raffael. Berlin: Deutscher Kunstverlag, 2010.
  11. Shelley Esaak, "The Sistine Madonna by Raphael"
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Gruyer (1905), p. 57.
  13. Sweetser (1877), pp. 121–122.
  14. Belting, Hans; Edmund Jephcott (15 January 1997). Likeness and presence: a history of the image before the era of art. University of Chicago Press. pp. 478–479. ISBN 978-0-226-04215-2. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  15. Belting, Hans; Helen Atkins (1 September 2001). The invisible masterpiece. University of Chicago Press. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-226-04265-7. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  16. Belting and Atkins (2001), 53.
  17. Belting and Atkins (2001), 54–55.
  18. Belting and Atkins (2001), 56–57.
  19. Belting and Atkins (2001), 58–59.
  20. 20.0 20.1 Carrier, David (2006). Museum skepticism: a history of the display of art in public galleries. Duke University Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-8223-3694-5. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  21. Kjetsaa, Geir (15 January 1989). A Writer's Life. Fawcett Columbine. p. 261.
  22. Belting and Atkins (2001), p. 61.
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 23.6 Akinsha, Konstantin; Grigorii Kozlov (April 1991). "Spoils of War". ARTnews. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  24. Naimark, Norman M. (1995). The Russians in Germany: a history of the Soviet Zone of occupation, 1945–1949. Harvard University Press. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-674-78405-5. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  25. 25.0 25.1 Smith, Kathleen E. (2002). Mythmaking in the new Russia: politics and memory during the Yeltsin era. Cornell University Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-8014-3963-6. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  26. Gesellschaft für Kulturelle Verbindungen mit dem Ausland (1982). GDR review. Verlag Zeit im Bild. Retrieved 27 June 2010. During the Second World War the valuable painting was seriously endangered. In 1943 the German fascists stored it and many other world-famous paintings in "T". This letter stood for a tunnel in a sandstone works near Pirna in Saxon Switzerland. As a result of the underground humidity the "Madonna" was exposed to destruction.
  27. Bekker, Henk (15 October 2005). Adventure Guide to Germany. Hunter Publishing, Inc. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-58843-503-3. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  28. Let's Go Inc (8 December 2006). Let's Go Germany. Macmillan. p. 607. ISBN 978-0-312-36070-2. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  29. Olson, Donald (14 July 2009). Germany For Dummies. For Dummies. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-470-47402-0. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  30. Steves, Rick (8 December 2009). Rick Steves' Germany 2010 with Map. Avalon Travel. p. 468. ISBN 978-1-59880-294-8. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  31. The Sistine Madonna: Raphael's iconic painting turns 500
  32. Dresden has the Original: The Sistine Madonna and her Angels
  33. Kobbé, Gustav (1913). Cherubs in art ... The associated newspaper school. p. 3. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  34. Thorson, Larry (December 4, 1995). "Raphael's angels are widely used detail of sublime painting". Luddington Daily News. Associated Press. Retrieved June 27, 2010.
  35. Hubbard, Elbert (14 July 2003). Fra Magazine: Exponent of American Philosophy, January 1912 to June 1912. Kessinger Publishing. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-7661-6403-1. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  36. Mary Mapes Dodge (1912). St. Nicholas: a monthly magazine for boys and girls. p. 335. Retrieved 27 June 2010.


References


External links

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