The Marriage in Cana.
Tintoret
At the end of the larger sacristy is the lunette which once decorated the
tomb of the Doge Francesco Dandolo, and, at the side of it, one of the most
highly finished Tintoret's in Venice, namely: The Marriage in Cana. An immense picture, some twenty-five feet long by
fifteen high, and said by Lazari to be one of the few which Tintoret signed with
his name. I am not surprised at his having done so in this case. Evidently the
work has been a favourite with him, and he has taken as much pains as it was
ever necessary for his colossal strength to take with anything. The subject is
not one which admits of much singularity or energy in composition. It was always
a favourite one with Veronese, because it gave dramatic interest to figures in
gay costumes and of cheerful countenances; but one is surprised to find
Tintoret,oil paintings for sale, whose tone of mind was always grave, and who did not like to make a
picture out of brocades and diadems, throwing his whole strength into the
conception of a marriage feast; but so it is, and there are assuredly no female
heads in any of his pictures in Venice elaborated so far as those which here
form the central light. Neither is it often that the works of this mighty master
conform themselves to any of the rules acted upon by ordinary painters; but in
this instance the popular laws have been observed, and an academy student would
be delighted to see with what severity the principal light is arranged in a
central mass, which is divided and made more brilliant by a vigorous piece of
shadow thrust into the midst of it, and which dies away in lesser fragments and
sparkling towards the extremities of the picture. This mass of light is as
interesting by its composition as by its intensity. The cicerone who escorts the
stranger round the sacristy in the course of five minutes and allows him some
forty seconds for the contemplation of a picture which the study of six months would not entirely fathom, directs his attention
very carefully to the "bell' effetto di prospettivo," the whole merit of the
picture being,cheap oil paintings, in the eyes of the intelligent public, that there is a long table
in it, one end of which looks further off than the other; but there is more in
the "bell' effetto di prospettivo" than the observance of the common law of
optics. The table is set in a spacious chamber, of which the windows at the end
let in the light from the horizon, and those in the side wall the intense blue
of an Eastern sky. The spectator looks all along the table, at the farther end
of which are seated Christ and the Madonna, the marriage guests on each side of
it,—on one side men, on the other women; the men are set with their backs to the
light, which passing over their heads and glancing slightly on the table-cloth,
falls in full length along the line of young Venetian women, who thus fill the
whole centre of the picture with one broad sunbeam, made up of fair faces and
golden hair. Close to the spectator a woman has risen in amazement, and
stretches across the table to show the wine in her cup to those opposite; her
dark red dress intercepts and enhances the mass of gathered light. It is rather
curious,art oil paintings, considering the subject of the picture, that one cannot distinguish
either the bride or the bride-groom; but the fourth figure from the Madonna in
the line of women, who wears a white head-dress of lace and rich chains of
pearls in her hair, may well be accepted for the former, and I think that
between her and the woman on the Madonna's left hand the unity of the line of
women is intercepted by a male figure: be this as it may, this fourth female
face is the most beautiful, as far as I recollect, that occurs in the works of
the painter, with the exception only of the Madonna in the Flight into
Egypt. It is an ideal which occurs indeed elsewhere in many of his works, a
face at once dark and delicate, the Italian cast of feature moulded with the
softness and childishness of English beauty some half a century ago; but I have
never seen the ideal so completely worked out by the master. The face may best
be described as one of the purest and softest of Stothard's conceptions,
executed with all the strength of Tintoret. The other women are all made
inferior to this one,paintings for sale, but there are beautiful profiles and bendings of breasts
and necks along the whole line. The men are all subordinate, though there are
interesting portraits among them; perhaps the only fault of the picture being
that the faces are a little too conspicuous, seen like balls of light among the
crowd of minor figures which fill the background of the picture. The tone of the
whole is sober and majestic in the highest degree; the dresses are all broad
masses of colour, and the only parts of the picture which lay claim to the
expression of wealth or splendour are the head-dresses of the women. In this
respect the conception of the scene differs widely from that of Veronese, and
approaches more nearly to the probable truth. Still the marriage is not an
important one; an immense crowd, filling the background, forming superbly rich
mosaic of colour against the distant sky. Taken as a whole the picture is
perhaps the most perfect example which human art has produced of the utmost
possible force and sharpness of shadow united with richness of local colour. In
all the other works of Tintoret, and much more of other colourists, either the
light and shade or the local colour is predominant; in the one case the
picture has a tendency to look as if painted by candle-light, in the other it
becomes daringly conventional, and approaches the conditions of glass-painting.
This picture unites colour as rich as Titian's with light and shade as forcible
as Rembrandt's, and far more decisive. original oil paintingsTintoret
There are one or two other interesting pictures of the early Venetian school in this sacristy, and several important tombs in the adjoining cloister; among which that of Francesco Dandolo, transported here from the Church of the Frari, deserves especial attention.
Stones of Venice (London, 1853).
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