Bernini's Genius
The Baroque master animated 17th-century Rome with his astonishing sculpture and architecture
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
Gian Lorenzo Bernini was said to have been only 8 when he carved a stone head that "was the marvel of everyone" who saw it, according to a contemporary biographer. He was not much older when he dazzled Pope Paul V, who reportedly declared, "We hope that this youth will become the Michelangelo of his century." Prophetic words: over a long lifetime, Bernini undertook commissions for eight popes, transforming the look of 17th-century Rome as Michelangelo had helped shape Florence and Rome a century before. Much of the Baroque grandeur of the Eternal City—its churches, fountains, piazzas and monuments—can be credited to Bernini and his followers.
Yet, despite his artistic stature, Bernini is only now receiving his first major American exhibition—at the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles (through October 26) and then at the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa (November 28, 2008-March 8, 2009). One explanation for the oversight is obvious, says Catherine Hess, associate curator of sculpture and decorative arts at the Getty and a co-curator of the exhibition. "How do you move Piazza San Pietro?" Like that grand piazza, which Bernini designed in front of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, the enormous marble sculptures for which the artist is best known are for all practical purposes untransportable. What does that leave? As it happens, a significant body of work: especially the portrait busts, a genre in which the young Bernini demonstrated that he was head and shoulders above the competition. "All the things that make Bernini great can be found in his portrait busts," says Hess.
By mid-career, as he became busier with large-scale ventures, Bernini did fewer busts—"only popes and kings, people you couldn't say no to," says exhibition co-curator Andrea Bacchi, professor at the University of Trento in Italy. But Bacchi believes one reason that the sculptor stopped doing busts after he got successful is that he valued them too highly to allow his assistants to take over the carving. By focusing this exhibition on portrait busts—including rare Italian loans that come as implicit thanks for the Getty's agreement last year to return some 40 antiquities said to have been excavated and exported illegally—the curators present a Bernini retrospective that is both intimate and revealing.
Bernini's prodigious output was the result of his skill at organization and his tireless self-discipline. He said that if he put together all the hours he spent on meals and sleep in his lifetime, he doubted whether they would add up to a full month. (A slim, dark-complexioned man who avoided the sun for fear of migraine headaches, Bernini typically ate only a small plate of meat and a large quantity of fruit each day.) At a young age, he was already managing a supporting cast of talented assistants. And he himself would labor for seven hours without interruption on a block of marble. According to a friend's description, the sculptor could carry on a lively conversation about the topics of the day, all the while "crouching, stretching...marking the marble with charcoal in a hundred places, and striking with the hammer in a hundred others; that is, striking in one place, and looking in the opposite place." Often Bernini proceeded without a terra-cotta model and sometimes even without a subject in front of him, realizing a vision that resided in his mind.
Indeed, he was a highly original thinker, not merely a consummate craftsman. In the many different arts he pursued—sculpture, architecture, painting, even playwriting—his works expressed ideas. Behind every Bernini masterpiece there lies a concetto, its governing concept or conceit. One concetto that fascinated the sculptor throughout his career was the attempt to overcome the limitations of his materials. When he was carving white marble, for example, he tried to suggest color: fashioning the eyes in his portrait busts, he would incise the irises deeply so that they lay in shadow and appeared dark. Even more ambitiously, he sought to imbue cold, inanimate stone with warmth, movement and life. Instead of positioning the subject of his busts straight on, he might have the head turning to the side or the fabric of the garment askew. In a number of his best sculptures, he pioneered what has been called a "speaking likeness," capturing a person in action or at the point of uttering words. He explained to an associate that "to make a successful portrait, one should choose an action and attempt to represent it well; that the best time to render the mouth is when [the subject] has just spoken or is just about to begin speaking; that one should try to catch this moment."
Cardinal Maffeo Barberini (later Pope Urban VIII) was once part of a group admiring a new Bernini bust (above left) of Monsignor Pedro de Foix Montoya—sharp-cheeked, furrow-browed and thick-mustached—when the monsignor himself entered the room. Barberini went up and touched the priest and said, "This is the portrait of Monsignor Montoya," then faced the marble bust and declared, "And this is Monsignor Montoya."
In his long career, no modeling job was more important to Bernini than fashioning his own image. "He wanted to create a legend around himself," Bacchi says. Recent scholarship reveals that the two seminal and supposedly independent biographies of the artist, begun toward the end of his life (one by his son Domenico), relied on information that Bernini himself supplied. And much of that he may have doctored. Many historians, for instance, believe that Bernini shaved a few years off his age when recounting the tale of the marvelous stone bust he claimed to have carved at age 8; he was probably in his early teens. Pope Paul V's comparison of Bernini to Michelangelo was another notion that the sculptor vigorously promoted. "If it isn't something that he invented, which he may have, it is something that he fostered very much in the later years of his life," says Tod Marder, professor of art history at Rutgers University. "Bernini was very familiar with the accounts of Michelangelo. He used that familiarity in cobbling together an account of his own life and career." Consequently, as Bacchi observes, "it is a strange fact that you know so much about the life of the artist from the artist himself, but you have to double-check everything."
At the time of Bernini's birth, in 1598, painting was the exciting art form in Rome—especially the new and startling realism of Caravaggio. Sculpture had become the domain of a worn-out Mannerism, replete with formulaic affectations and exaggerations. Bernini's father, Pietro, was such a sculptor. Of Tuscan origins, he had moved to Rome from Naples with his Neapolitan wife, Angelica Galante, when Gian Lorenzo was about 8. Ruled by the popes, who were constructing lavish churches and monuments, Rome was the place for a sculptor to find work.
Pietro encouraged his gifted son. When a visitor to his studio asked if he felt threatened by the prospect of his child surpassing him, Pietro replied, "It doesn't bother me, for as you know, in that case the loser wins." Among the powerful and well-connected art connoisseurs who recognized the boy's talent was Cardinal Scipione Borghese, who commis-sioned four colossal marble statues from him—Aeneas, Anchises, and Ascanius Fleeing Troy; David; The Rape of Persephone; and Apollo and Daphne. These established Bernini, in his early to mid-20s at the time, as the city's pre-eminent sculptor, and they continue to dazzle present-day visitors to the Villa Borghese, the cardinal's palatial Roman residence, now a museum.
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Comments (25)
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Bernini was a monumental Artist-Sculptor. I wish i had his talented gift of sculpting.. I am just a painter artist. Philippe Agius from the island of Malta
Posted by Artist Philippe Agius on May 8,2013 | 11:43 AM
Dear Mr. Lubow,
About 10 years ago I remember reading an article by an important American minimalist sculptor(Morris,Irwin,Serra?)who wrote that Bernini's ballachino over St. Peters tomb is the most sculptural experience possible. He wrote about the metaphysical power and geometries of the reverse spirals playing off each other. Anyway to make a long story short I lost the article and I'm wondering if you know of it.
thank You,
George Rammell
Capilano University
Vancouver
Posted by george Rammell on March 9,2012 | 12:01 AM
Reading these comments takes me back to the first time, as a young and wide-eyed student of 17th C. art, I discovered Bernini. My professor and mentor was Robert T. Petersson, (Smith College). He taught me more than anyone else ever could about looking, seeing, apprehending life in stone, poetry, music, architecture and paint. His book on Bernini's St. Theresa should be required reading for any serious student of Bernini, or of 17th C. art.
Posted by Amy Moebius on May 18,2010 | 12:54 AM
I would like to know where is the "bozzetto" of the monument of pedro de foix montoya done by bernini. can you help me? thank you
ingeborg
Posted by Ingeborg on March 13,2010 | 11:52 AM
I am like many of the others who have posted comments: I read the article in the magazine and now I am eager to see more pictures of these works: the whole Apollo and Daphne; David; a larger Ectasy of St. Teresa; other of the named works.
Posted by Val Marciel on August 26,2009 | 05:32 PM
i just read Berts comments and feel exactly as he does the article told of these beautiful creations ,yet left to the imagination of what they looked like more photos ,even if they are smaller i would love to see what is described in the article ,to see larel roots growing out of her feet,i can only imagine it tom
Posted by tom on May 23,2009 | 04:00 PM
Nine years ago on the last day of my vacation in Rome, I visited the Borghese museum, one of the last places on my list of things to see. I was actually stunned by the Bernini sculptures there. I could not believe that marble could be made so lifelike. I couldn't resist touching Daphne. The marble felt like baby's skin. As an architectural student I had studied Rome's architecture and art. Seeing everything in person was an enlightening experience. Everything was better than I had pictured it. Bernini was the highlight.
Posted by Bob Hyten, Edwardsville, IL on December 12,2008 | 02:35 PM
As a lecturer of Rome Baroque at the Richmond University in Rome, where American students are following a semester abroad program, I was extremely pleased to read this very good article on the exhibition about my favourite artist at the Getty Museum. I must say that to teach and then have the opportunity to show my students what such a genius could create, gives me great joy. I shall definitely pass on the article to my students!
Posted by Antonella Merletto on November 20,2008 | 05:24 PM
I was so delighed to see the article on Bernini.I regret i cannot get to see his works at the Getty Museum..but they are beautiful...I have seen them on various trips to Italy and found them so real and lifelike..amazing man..and really glad that you have brought his works to the public for the world to know of this great man.
Posted by Gina Bernini on October 30,2008 | 12:38 PM
really enjoyed Bernini - keep quality historical articles coming like that.
Posted by jo beckwith on October 29,2008 | 11:15 AM
The Fountains of the Four Rivers is so special. While Trevi has a song and fame the Bernini epic is really THE fountain to visit.
Posted by Jack Sydell on October 28,2008 | 07:56 PM
I read your article after viewing the the beautiful Bernini exhibition at the Getty last week. It enhanced my experience and put into words all my feelings about his work. I was transported back to Rome and my visits to the Borghese Museo, to the Cornaro Chapel in The Church of Santa Maria della Vittoria along with St. Peters and Piazza Navona. It was wonderful revisiting all my favorite places with you. Thank you for this enjoyable article.
Posted by Theresa Scutellaro on October 21,2008 | 08:35 PM
For any of your readers who haven't had an opportunity to visit Rome, to see Bernini's sculptures within touching distance will prompt you to muse, 'This is magic, how did he do that!' If you are in the area of the Getty, don't delay visiting the work of a genius.
Posted by Donald Wright on October 14,2008 | 03:50 PM
For those of you who would like a better representation of his work, this web-site is very good. http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/b/bernini/gianlore/sculptur/index.html
Posted by Linda Thomas on October 12,2008 | 03:18 PM
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