The Rape of Helen.
Gozzoli.
It was to the former class that Benozzo Gozzoli belonged, pupil though he was
of Fra Angelico. Although his special quality may be partly discerned in the
altar-piece that hangs above his master's predella, in the strongly
marked character of the saints, and perhaps more in the carefully studied
goldfinches, there was little scope in such a subject for the exercise of his
imagination or the display of his individuality. It is different with the little
panel opposite,139 The Rape of Helen (No. 591), in which he has
depicted with great liveliness and gusto a scene from a classical legend.
Possibly, to Fra Angelico, who regarded painting only as a means of edification,oil paintings for sale,its employment on such a subject may have seemed little less than sacrilege, not
unlike the use of a chancel for the stabling of horses. Such views can scarcely
be said to be extinct now, and this is the more remarkable as no one has the
same feeling with regard to the other arts, such as sculpture or poetry. To a
young man like Benozzo, and many others of his day, not monks, nor specially
devout in disposition, it must, nevertheless, have been a change which was
welcome. To paint the Virgin enthroned with Saints over and over again,
must have been a little wearisome to men conscious of a fancy to which they
could give no scope except by putting S. Jerome's hat in a new place, or
introducing a couple of goldfinches. One likes to think of the pleasure with
which Gozzoli received his commission one morning, perhaps from Cosimo de'
Medici himself, for whom his master was adorning a cell in the Convent of San
Marco, recently rebuilt at the great man's expense. Did he know the legend of
Helen of Troy,art oil paintings online, or had he to seek the advice of some scholar like Nicolli or
Poggio for the right tradition? He seems, indeed, to have been rather mixed in
his ideas on the subject. Did he consult Brunellesco in the construction of his
Greek Temple, or Donatello or Ghiberti for the statue inside? Whence came that
wonderful landscape with its mountains and cypress trees and strange-shaped
ships? From his imagination, or from some old missal or choir-book illumination?
At all events,art oil paintings for sale, pleasure evidently went to the making of it, for his fancy
had full scope. His costumes he adopted frankly from those of his day, adding
some features in the way of strange headgear, much like those in Fra Angelico's
Adoration (in which he possibly had a hand), to give an Eastern colour to
the group of boyish heroes on the left; not knowing or considering that the
robes in which he was accustomed to drape his angels were much nearer to, were
indeed derived from, the costume of the Greeks. For his ideal of female beauty
he seems to have been satisfied with his own taste. One can scarcely imagine a
face or figure much less classical than that of the blonde with the
retroussénose (presumably Helen herself), who is riding so complacently
on the neck of the long-legged Italian in the centre. The figures in the Temple
are of a finer type, and the lady in the sweeping robe,original oil paintings, with the long sleeves,
who turns her back to us, has a simple dignity which reminds one less of
Gozzoli's master than of Lippo Lippi or Masaccio, whose frescoes in the Carmine
he, in common with all other artists, had doubtless studied. There is nothing so
classical or so natural in the picture as the beautiful little bare-legged boy
that is running away in the foreground. This little bright panel—so gay, so
naïve, so ignorant, and withal so charming—is of importance in the history of
art as illustrated in the National Gallery. It is the first in which the artist
has given full play to his imagination, and entered the romantic world of
classic legend, and, with one exception, the first which is purely secular in
subject, and was designed for a "secular" purpose. It probably once formed part
of a marriage-chest. The important share which the landscape has in the
composition, and its serious attempt at perspective, are also worthy of note. As
an example of the master himself, of the painter of the great panoramic
procession of the notables of his day, which under the title of the Adoration
of the Kings, covers the walls of the chapel in the Medici Palace at
Florence, of the designs of the history of S. Agostino at San Gemignano, and of
the frescoes in Campo Santo at Pisa, it is of course extremely inadequate, but
it suffices to indicate many paths which the young artist was to strike out from
the old track which sufficed for his saint-like master. where to buy oil paintingsGozzoli.
In the National Gallery (London, 1895).
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