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Wednesday, October 30, 2013
The Annunciation
Let us take another instance. No subject has been more frequently or exquisitely
treated by the religious painters than that of the Annunciation, though as usual, the most perfect type of its pure ideal has been
given by Angelico, and by him with the most radiant consummation (so far as I
know) in a small reliquary in the sacristy of Sta. Maria Novella. The
background there, however, is altogether decorative; but in the fresco of the corridor of St.
Mark's, the concomitant circumstances are of exceeding loveliness. The Virgin
sits in an open loggia, resembling that of the Florentine church of
L'Annunziata. Before her is a meadow of rich herbage,original oil paintings, covered with daisies.
Behind her is seen through the door at the end of the loggia, her chamber with
its single grated window, through which a star-like beam of light falls into the
silence. All is exquisite in feeling, but not inventive nor imaginative. Severe
would be the shock and painful the contrast, if we could pass in an instant from
that pure vision to the wild thought of Tintoret. For not in meek reception of
the adoring messenger, but startled by the rush of his horizontal and rattling
wings, the virgin sits, not in the quiet loggia, not by the green pasture of the
restored soul, but houseless,oil paintings for sale, under the shelter of a palace vestibule ruined and
abandoned, with the noise of the axe and the hammer in her ears, and the tumult
of a city round about her desolation. The spectator turns away at first,
revolted, from the central object of the picture, forced painfully and coarsely
forward, a mass of shattered brickwork, with the plaster mildewed away from it,
and the mortar mouldering from its seams; and if he look again, either at this
or at the carpenter's tools beneath it, will perhaps see in the one and the
other, nothing more than such a study of scene as Tintoret could but too easily
obtain among the ruins of his own Venice, chosen to give a coarse explanation of
the calling and the condition of the husband of Mary. But there is more meant
than this. When he looks at the composition of the picture, he will find the
whole symmetry of it depending on a narrow line of light, the edge of a
carpenter's square, which connects these unused tools with an object at the top
of the brickwork, a white stone, four square, the corner-stone of the old
edifice, the base of its supporting column. This, I think, sufficiently explains
the typical character of the whole. The ruined house is the Jewish dispensation,
that obscurely arising in the dawning of the sky is the Christian; but the
corner-stone of the old building remains, though the builder's tools lie idle
beside it, and the stone which the builders refused is become the Headstone of
the corner. still life oil paintings
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