This September marks the third anniversary of Giorgione et al… Previously, I had created a website for my work on Giorgione's Tempest but was advised that blogspot
would reach a wider audience. Seeing the Tempest as a sacred subject, "The Rest on the Flight into Egypt", provided the key that opened the door to a number of other new interpretations of equally famous and mysterious paintings of the Venetian Renaissance. Below are brief summaries of the four major interpretive discoveries. In a subsequent post I will list a number of secondary but significant discoveries that have arisen from my work on Giorgione and Titian.
Discussions of these interpretations can be found throughout Giorgione et al... by clicking on the labels or using the search box. The full papers have been published at MyGiorgione.
Incredibly, I am not a professional art historian. Although I hold a doctorate in History my field of study was eighteenth century British politics, and I left academe in 1972. Until my retirement in 2007 I was a financial advisor. Only in the last few years did travel and some other factors lead me to Venice.
Discussions of these interpretations can be found throughout Giorgione et al... by clicking on the labels or using the search box. The full papers have been published at MyGiorgione.
Incredibly, I am not a professional art historian. Although I hold a doctorate in History my field of study was eighteenth century British politics, and I left academe in 1972. Until my retirement in 2007 I was a financial advisor. Only in the last few years did travel and some other factors lead me to Venice.
Giorgione: The Tempest. In the fall of 2005 I interpreted the subject of the Tempest as “The Rest on the Flight into
Egypt.” In this interpretation all the major elements in the painting are
identified. The nude woman nursing an infant is the Madonna. The man standing
at the left functioning as an “interlocutor” is St. Joseph with his staff. The
broken columns are commonplace in depictions of the “Rest on the Flight into
Egypt.” The city in the background is Judea from where the Holy Family has fled
but could also be equated with Padua during the Cambrai war. The scraggly plant
in the foreground is identified as a “belladonna” a plant associated with
witchcraft and the Devil. Even the bird on the distant rooftop is shown to be
derived from a famous Psalm. A short essay was published in the Masterpiece
column of the Wall St. Journal In may, 2006. In 2010 I presented a paper on the
“Tempest” at the annual meeting of the Renaissance Society of America held that
year in Venice.
Titian: Sacred and
Profane Love. In 2010 after a visit to Rome’s Borghese Gallery, I realized
that the subject of Titian’s Sacred and
Profane Love was the Conversion of
Mary Magdalen. In this interpretation all the elements in Titian’s famous
painting are identified. The finely dressed Woman is Mary Magdalen in the guise
of a Venetian courtesan. The nude Woman is the converted Magdalen in the
process of throwing off her worldly finery. In her hand she holds the jar of
ointment that is found in practically every depiction of the great
sinner/saint. The antique relief on the sarcophagus-like fountain, which so far
has eluded explanation, can now be seen to depict three great sinners: Adam and
Eve, Cain and Abel, and St. Paul falling from his horse. In 2012 I presented my
interpretation of the Sacred and Profane Love at the annual meeting of the
South Central Renaissance conference in New Orleans.
Giorgione: Three Ages
of Man. After seeing the Tempest
as a “sacred subject” I was able to take a fresh look at some of his other
mysterious paintings. For example, I discovered the subject of the Three Ages of Man to be the Encounter of Jesus with the Rich Young Man
derived from an episode in the Gospel of Matthew. So far there has been no
scholarly agreement on the subject of this famous depiction of three
half-length figures that now hangs in the Pitti Palace in Florence. The young man in the center, whose
clothing indicates his wealth, has just asked how he can achieve eternal life.
On the right, Jesus dressed in a green vestment points to the commandments that
he has directed the man to follow. On the left, an aging, bald Peter, dressed
in martyr’s red, invites the viewer to enter the scene.
Titian: Pastoral Concert. Earlier this year I argued that this famous and mysterious painting whose attribution has been variously given to Giorgione and Titian should be considered as Titian's Homage to Giorgione. There are signs in the painting that the finely dressed lute player is not only Giorgione, but also that he has recently died. His face is in shadow; the lute has no strings; and the female muse at the left is pouring out his soul into the well. I believe that all the Giorgionesque elements in the painting were put there by Titian in homage to his mentor. The shepherd and flock in the background indicate that Titian, the young rustic on the right, portrayed himself as David grieving over the loss of Jonathan. Both the female nudes are the muse, Euterpe.
Needless to say, these interpretations have not met with acclaim in the scholarly community. It is my hope that young scholars and students (with better tools and more energy than I possess) will be open to see with their own eyes and explore the possibility that Venetians living during the Renaissance were primarily interested in beautiful renditions of traditional sacred subjects.
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Titian: Pastoral Concert. Earlier this year I argued that this famous and mysterious painting whose attribution has been variously given to Giorgione and Titian should be considered as Titian's Homage to Giorgione. There are signs in the painting that the finely dressed lute player is not only Giorgione, but also that he has recently died. His face is in shadow; the lute has no strings; and the female muse at the left is pouring out his soul into the well. I believe that all the Giorgionesque elements in the painting were put there by Titian in homage to his mentor. The shepherd and flock in the background indicate that Titian, the young rustic on the right, portrayed himself as David grieving over the loss of Jonathan. Both the female nudes are the muse, Euterpe.
Needless to say, these interpretations have not met with acclaim in the scholarly community. It is my hope that young scholars and students (with better tools and more energy than I possess) will be open to see with their own eyes and explore the possibility that Venetians living during the Renaissance were primarily interested in beautiful renditions of traditional sacred subjects.
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