Bernini's Genius
The Baroque master animated 17th-century Rome with his astonishing sculpture and architecture
- By Arthur Lubow
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
With his David, Bernini took a subject that other great sculptors had tackled before him and made it his own. Instead of depicting the victorious warrior with the head of Goliath (as Florentine sculptor Donatello had done), or (like Michelangelo) showing the coolly confident youth before the battle, Bernini chose the most dramatic moment—when David is about to let fly the stone from his taut slingshot. Bernini's method was to seize and freeze the revelatory moment; he positioned his statues against walls, so that a spectator would take in the work from a prescribed perspective. With the David, you were meant to stand facing the young warrior, as Goliath did.
In his sculpture of the mythological Daphne, who was transformed into a laurel tree by her father to elude the unwanted attentions of Apollo, Bernini showed Daphne's skin changing to bark, her toes elongating into root tendrils and her fingers sprouting leaves, just as the lustful Apollo, his prize in his grasp, begins to realize what is happening. The Apollo and Daphne is a jaw-dropping feat of virtuosity. "In my opinion, not even the ancients did anything to equal it," Bacchi says. The roughness of the bark, the translucence of the leaves, the nymph's flying tresses—all are carved with such exquisite specificity that, once again, it is easy to overlook the audacity of the concetto. The process of metamorphosis was a subject for painters, not something to show by chiseling and drilling hard stone. And yet, wasn't metamorphosis a sculptor's task? Carving a block of stone into a lifelike form could be seen as a supernatural—even divine—feat.
When he finished the sculpture, according to his first biographer, Filippo Baldinucci, Bernini "attracted everyone's eye" and was pointed out in public. Yet he wasn't, in truth, personally responsible for the work's most acclaimed features. As Jennifer Montagu, a co-curator of the exhibition, has written, Bernini focused his efforts on the main figures—and the concetto. The execution of the roots, branches and hair tresses in this sculpture was largely the work of his assistant, Giuliano Finelli, who bitterly resented the lack of credit and went on to have a successful independent career. (Finelli's own work is also on display in the Getty show.) Finelli maintained a lifelong attention to minute detail. Bernini's work, however, was about to enter a new phase.
In 1623, Barberini, his friend and patron, was elected Pope Urban VIII. As Bernini's son Domenico relates, the new pope summoned the young artist to his side. "Your luck is great to see Cardinal Maffeo Barberini Pope, Cavaliere," he said, "but ours is much greater to have Cavalier Bernini alive in our pontificate." For the 20 years of Urban VIII's tenure, Bernini enjoyed unparalleled access to Urban and an abundance of papal commissions—not only sculptures, but entire architectural environments.
His most ambitious project was for St. Peter's interior. From 1624 to 1633, he designed and oversaw the construction of a massive bronze baldacchino, or canopy, above St. Peter's tomb. Traditionally, a tomb of this importance would have been covered with a small temple-like structure. Instead, Bernini fashioned four twisting columns as posts, which he topped with something that resembled a bed or processional canopy. Slender, leafy branches climb the columns, and from the roof, clothlike panels and tassels hang—all in bronze. "People at that time used to make ephemeral decorations out of paper and have them look monumental," Bacchi observes. "Bernini did monumental works that look like ephemeral works."
The imposing piazza that Bernini laid out in front of St. Peter's about a quarter of a century later, at the direction of Pope Alexander VII, is bordered by a free-standing, grandly curved double colonnade that he said was meant to represent the motherly arms of the church. Within the basilica, the contemporaneous Cathedra Petri, or throne of St. Peter, rivals the artist's earlier baldacchino—both for the elaborate gilded bronze sculptures produced by his studio and for its drama, provided in part by the golden light that pours through a yellow stained-glass window above it.
Bernini spent his entire adult life in Rome and, not surprisingly, he was chauvinistically Roman. His only known absence from the city was a trip to France in 1665, when he was invited by King Louis XIV to design an addition—ultimately rejected—to the Louvre royal palace. Throughout his time in France, he complained. All of Paris, he said, was worth less than a painting by the Italian artist Guido Reni. He compared the chimney-dotted city skyline to a wool-carding comb and characterized the royal palace in the Tuileries as "a big little thing." He complimented the architect François Mansart but noted how much greater he might have been had he lived in Rome.
Having rendered the grand-scale illusions of the Borghese statues and the Vatican commissions, Bernini was after something subtler when he returned in the 1630s to doing the portrait busts that he had first undertaken as a youth. "When Bernini came back to sculpture, it was not so virtuosic, not so many fireworks," says Bacchi. "He tried to capture life in a more synthesizing way—not to capture every detail but to give the impression of life."
A prime example is the bust he made of Scipione Borghese in 1632, generally considered one of the great portraits in art history. The sculptor portrayed the prelate's fat jowls and neck, the pockets around his eyes and the quizzically raised eyebrows (below) in such a lifelike fashion that one comes away with a palpable sense of what it would have been like to be in the prelate's presence. His head turned slightly to the side, his lips apart—is he about to share some titillating gossip?
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (25)
+ View All Comments
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
+ View All Comments