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Saint Mark's Body Brought to Venice

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Mark's Body Brought to Venice
ArtistTintoretto
Year1562–1566
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions398 cm × 315 cm (157 in × 124 in)
LocationGallerie dell'Accademia, Venice

Saint Mark's Body Brought to Venice, The Abduction of the Body of Saint Mark or Translation of the Body of Saint Mark is a painting by Tintoretto depicting the translatio, or transfer of Saint Mark's relics from Alexandria to Venice. It was produced between 1562 and 1566 as part of a series of works on Saint Mark for the Sala Capitolare of the Scuola Grande di San Marco - the others are Miracle of the Slave, Saint Mark Saving a Saracen from Shipwreck and Finding of the Body of Saint Mark. It is now held in the Gallerie dell'Accademia in Venice.[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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Transcription

(Cheerful Piano Music) Male Voiceover: We're in the basilica of Saint Mark in Venice, and it's called Saint Mark because it holds the body, the relic, of Saint Mark. Female voiceover: A couple of Venetian Merchants stole the body of Saint Mark from Alexandria in 829, and when his body was brought back, this was obviously an incredibly important relic. and the construction on the church began soon after that. Male voiceover: Now think about this. Saint Mark was one of the evangelists, one of the authors of the New Testament. It doesn't get more important than this, and the idea of bringing his body back from Alexandria was especially important because Egypt was then controlled not by the Byzantine Empire, that is, not by the Christian world, but it was in Islamic hands. Female voiceover: There is even a legend that Saint Mark had a vision that his final resting place should be in Venice. Male voiceover: Of course, these are the kinds of legends that grow up to justify these sorts of historical events. Female voiceover: That's how it seems to us, certainly in the 21st century. The church is Byzantine in style, in every way we think about Byzantine architecture. Male voiceover: And the church that we're in currently was begun in 1063. It replaced two earlier and smaller shrines This does refer to the Byzantine in very direct ways. The Venetians wanted their art, their architecture, to recall not only the Byzantine, the eastern traditions, but specifically the traditions of Constantinople. and so this church was based on The Church of the Holy Apostles, in Constantinople, a church that no longer exists. Female voiceover: And like The Church of the Holy Apostles, Saint Mark's is essentially a Greek cross, a cross with equal arms with domes over each arm, and another dome over the crossing. Male voiceover: And those domes recall a very direct link to the kind of architecture we find in Constantinople, that is a dome that has windows at it's base. A kind of necklace of light that makes the dome seem to levitate upward, and not to be supported. Female voiceover: That's the idea of the whole interior, the sense of being in a golden jewel box, the walls are covered with golden mosaics, so you have this sense of what you know to be solid wall dissolving into glittering light. Male voiceover: 40,000 square feet of the surface of this church is covered with mosaic. Female voiceover: The mosaics date from different time periods. But let's take a look at an early mosaic of a subject called The Harrowing of Hell, also known as The Anastasis. This is Christ, who has gone into Hell. He's battered down the doors, he's going in to save virtuous souls who are there because the lived before the possibility of salvation, that is, before his sacrifice on the cross. Male voiceover: In this case, you actually see Christ grabbing the wrist of Adam, Eve is just behind him. He's going to save Adam and Eve from Limbo, that is, from not being able to enter Heaven. Female voiceover: And you'll notice he's grabbing Adam not by the hand, but by the wrist. This idea that human beings can't save themselves, but needed Christ's sacrifice, they need Christ. Male voiceover: It's not a partnerhship, in other words. It is Christ leading them out. And behind them, perhaps other worthy souls. Perhaps Old Testament prophets. But I think my favorite part is what Christ is standing on. Female voiceover: Well, he's standing on Satan, whose hands are bound in chains and who's represented in a much darker color. Male voiceover: and around him is the debris of Christ's entrance into Hell. You can see the chains strewn about, you can see keys, you can see the doors of Hell that Christ had knocked down and now forms a cross. Female voiceover: And all of this, of course, in this typical Byzantine style, with a gold background, with forms of drapery created by lines that are more stylized than the way drapery falls on a human body. Male voiceover: Well, look at Christ for a moment. If you follow his right arm, the arm that holds Adam's wrist, look just over the elbow, and you see a bit of drapery that is just flying up, and it not only seems to have a life of its own, it also seems to suggest that christ has just arrived. Look at the length of those bodies, Look at their attenuation, This is not the proportion of ancient Greece, this is not the renaissance. This is that moment in the mid Byzantine style where we see that symbolic representation of the human form, not a precise rendering that is based on observation-- Female voiceover: Or look at Adam kneeling with his right knee coming to a point and then his left calf (Male laughs) and foot extending out behind him. This is not naturalism, this is the symbolic Byzantine language that we know so well. (Cheerful piano music)

Composition

The painting is notable for its striking, deep perspective background lines. The colours are darker in the near subjects, while the figures in the background are white, nearly transparent. The strange red sky is roiling with ominous gray clouds, riven with a thunderbolt, affording the painting a heavy, dynamic atmosphere.[2] Tintoretto depicted himself within the work as the bearded man beside the camel.[2] He portrays Torcello and Malamocco carrying Mark's body as they arrived back in Venice. The Piazza San Marco, or St. Mark's Square is displayed in the painting with onlookers fleeing in the background. The public square appears narrow to convey the tenseness of the abduction of Saint Mark's body.

Subject

Saint Mark spent most of his life in Alexandria, Egypt.[3] His body was brought to Venice eight centuries after his death in AD 68. Venice's ruling class wanted St. Mark as the patron saint for their economic status, so they arranged to smuggle his body from Egypt.[3] While stealing the body, the thieves Buono da Malamocco and Rustico da Torcello hid the body under pork and vegetables.[4] Once they arrived in Venice on January 31, 828, Mark's body was kept in Doge Giustiniano's palace.[4] When the doge died, his widow was ordered to build the Basilica di San Marco to house Mark.[3] Fear that Saint Mark's body would be stolen again continued after the death of the Doge. According to a French monk, Mark's body was safely stored in "one of the great pillars".[3] However, when the chapel of Basilica di San Marco was rebuilt in 1063, Saint Mark's body could not be found.[3] Thirty years after this, it was said that Saint Mark's body re-appeared, with his arm appearing from an old pillar.[3] After re-appearing, Saint Mark's body was finally put in a sculptured coffin below the high altar in the chapel.[3]

References

  1. ^ "Stealing the Body of Saint Mark". www.arts.magic-nation.co.uk.
  2. ^ a b "The Removal of the Body of Saint Mark". https://www.gallerieaccademia.it/en/removal-body-saint-mark
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Grave robbers in gondolas: How the remains of St. Mark came to be in Venice". https://aleteia.org/2019/07/10/grave-robbers-in-gondolas-how-the-remains-of-saint-mark-came-to-be-in-venice/
  4. ^ a b "Theft". http://www.basilicasanmarco.it/storia-e-societa/san-marco-evangelista/il-trafugamento/?lang=en

Sources

  • Gillo Dorfles, Stefania Buganza e Jacopo Stoppa, Arti visive. Dal Quattrocento all'Impressionismo, Atlas, 2001

External links

This page was last edited on 2 May 2024, at 01:29
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