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Brief biography The baroque sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini was born in 1598 in Naples, son of the Tuscan sculptor Pietro Bernini. In 1605 the family ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brief%20biography


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Brief biography
  • The baroque sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo
    Bernini was born in 1598 in Naples, son of the
    Tuscan sculptor Pietro Bernini. In 1605 the
    family moved to Rome. As a boy, Gian Lorenzo
    worked as assistant to his less talented father.
  • Bernini's first patron was the nephew of Pope
    Paul V, Cardinal Scipio Borghese, for whom he
    executed the four famous sculpture groups in the
    Borghese Gallery David, Aeneas with Anchises and
    Ascanius, Apollo and Daphne, and the Rape of
    Proserpina. Subsequently he worked for Pope Urban
    VIII (Maffeo Barberini), designing and executing
    the bronze canopy over the high altar of St.
    Peter's.
  • In 1644 Urban VIII was succeeded by Innocence X
    (Pamphilij) and for a time Bernini fell out of
    favor. During this period the sculptor began to
    work on the group "Time uncovers Truth", now in
    the Borghese Gallery, (presumably a reference to
    his own position), and obtained some private
    commissions. But with his design for the Fountain
    of the Rivers in Piazza Navona, he regained papal
    patronage, and from then on he worked chiefly for
    the Vatican. The cathedra in the apse of St.
    Peter's and the layout of the square in front of
    the basilica date from this period.

3
Baroque
  • The period in art history from about 1600 to
    about 1750. In this sense the term covers a wide
    range of styles and artists. In painting and
    sculpture there were three main forms of Baroque
    (1) sumptuous display, a style associated with
    the Catholic Counter Reformation and the
    absolutist courts of Europe (Bernini, Rubens)
    (2) dramatic realism (Caravaggio) and (3)
    everyday realism, a development seen in
    particular in Holland (Rembrandt, Vermeer). In
    architecture, there was an emphasis on
    expressiveness and grandeur, achieved through
    scale, the dramatic use of light and shadow, and
    increasingly elaborate decoration. In a more
    limited sense the term Baroque often refers to
    the first of these categories.

4
Fontana del Tritone Travertine, over
life-sizePiazza Barberini, Rome1624-43

5
Fontana del Tritone
  • Saint Peter's throne is the last of Bernini's
    large monuments designed for the San Pietro. This
    completes and crowns his forty years long work in
    the decoration of the interior of the main church
    of the Roman Catholics. The throne symbolizes the
    power of the Pope. Bernini created an optical and
    artistic unity of the throne and the baldachin
    erected above the tomb of Saint Peter. The light
    coming from a natural source (the window of the
    apsis) is part of the composition, similarly than
    in two other great Bernini compositions, in the
    Saint Therese group, and in the tomb Ludovica
    Albertoni.
  • This composition became the prototype of the
    Baroque glories to be found in large numbers in
    European churches.

6
Fountain of the Four Rivers1648-51Travertine
and marblePiazza Navona, Rome
7
The Fountain of the Four Rivers
  • This fountain was executed by a large group of
    coworkers under the supervision of Bernini. It is
    debated whether he sculpted personally the rocks,
    the palmtree, the lion and the horse, but it is
    generally accepted that his contribution was
    limited to the final phase of the work. From the
    remaining sketches it is unambigous that the idea
    and design are Bernini's. This composition
    preceded and prepared the great composition of
    Saint Peter's throne in the San Pietro.
  • The fountain represents the four continents and
    their rivers, the obelisk in the center is the
    symbol of Christ and the triumphing Roman
    Catholic Church over the whole world. The figure
    of Nile, sculpted by Jacopo Antonio Fancelli,
    represents Africa the Danube, by Antonio Raggi,
    Europe the Ganges, by Claude Poussin, Asia and
    the Plate, by Francesco Baratta, the Americas,
    discovered a century and a half earlier.

8
The Ecstasy of Saint Therese1647-52Marble,
height 350 cmCappella Cornaro, Santa Maria della
Vittoria, Rome
9
The Ecstasy of Saint Therese
  • Bernini tackles a theme, as old as the tradition
    of images the female principal transmuted by the
    action of the male principal. The two figures are
    situated in space with a subtle displacement of
    their bodies. Almost indescribable is the gesture
    of the angel-satyr, shown as he draws the dart
    from the female body, caught in momentary
    abeyance before it falls back. The figures are
    brought to life before our eyes. The centre of
    gravity of the complex mass of marble is
    shifting the saint is sinking down (her symbolic
    foot emerging), and the young satyr moves into
    the forefront. The focal point of the whole is in
    that flame-tipped arrow so vividly described by
    St Teresa of Avila in her spiritual
    autobiography.

10
The Throne of Saint Peter1657-66Marble, bronze,
white and golden stuccoSan Pietro, Rome
11
The Throne of Saint Peter
  • Saint Peter's throne is the last of Bernini's
    large monuments designed for the San Pietro. This
    completes and crowns his forty years long work in
    the decoration of the interior of the main church
    of the Roman Catholics. The throne symbolizes the
    power of the Pope. Bernini created an optical and
    artistic unity of the throne and the baldachin
    erected above the tomb of Saint Peter. The light
    coming from a natural source (the window of the
    apsis) is part of the composition, similarly than
    in two other great Bernini compositions, in the
    Saint Therese group, and in the tomb Ludovica
    Albertoni.
  • This composition became the prototype of the
    Baroque glories to be found in large numbers in
    European churches.

12
Tomb of Pope Alexander (Chigi) VII1671-78Marble
and gilded bronze, over life-sizeBasilica di San
Pietro, Vatican
13
Tomb of Pope Alexander (Chigi) VII
  • This is the second monumental papal tomb in the
    San Pietro made by Bernini. It was commissioned
    by the Pope and executed after his death in 1667
    by a large group of sculptors headed by Bernini.
  • The composition is similar to that of the other
    (Urban VIII) tomb, however, there some
    differences. In contrast with the dominant figure
    of the Pope on the Urban tomb, the Pope here is a
    simple kneeling figure without any sign of his
    office. Instead of two there are four allegoric
    figures, Charity, Prudence, Justice and Truth.
    Below, there is a (real) door symbolizing the
    Gate of Death, from which a sand-glass holding
    skeleton (the Death) raises the heavy drapery.

14
Tomb of Pope Urban VIII (Basilica di San Pietro,
Vatican) Golden bronze and marble, figures larger
than life-size (1627-47)
15
Trip to France
  • Bernini went to Paris in 1665, in what was his
    only prolonged absence from Rome. The trip was
    made in response to invitations that for many
    years had been extended to him by King Louis XIV,
    and the purpose was the design of a new French
    royal residence. By this time, Bernini was so
    famous that crowds lined the streets of each city
    along the route to watch him pass. His initial
    reception in Paris was equally triumphant, but he
    soon offended his sensitive hosts by imperiously
    praising the art and architecture of Italy at the
    expense of that of France. His statements made
    him unpopular at the French court and were to
    some degree responsible for the rejection of his
    designs for the Louvre. The only relic of
    Bernini's visit to France is his great bust of
    Louis XIV, a linear, vertical, and stable
    portrait, in which the Sun King gazes out with
    godlike authority. The image set a standard for
    royal portraits that lasted 100 years.

16
Epilogue
  • Bernini died at the age of 81, after having
    served eight popes, and when he died he was
    widely considered not only Europe's greatest
    artist but also one of its greatest men. He was
    the last of Italy's remarkable series of
    universal geniuses, and the Baroque style he
    helped create was the last Italian style to
    become an international standard. His death
    marked the end of Italy's artistic hegemony in
    Europe. The style he evolved was carried on for
    two more generations in various parts of Europe
    by the architects Mattia de' Rossi and Carlo
    Fontana in Rome, J.B. Fischer von Erlach in
    Austria, and the brothers Cosmas and Egid Quirin
    Asam in Bavaria, among others.
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