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 3 of 3)
Even more extraordinary is the bust that Bernini completed in 1638 of Costanza Bonarelli, the wife of one of the sculptor's assistants and also Bernini's lover. When he discovered she was also having an affair with his younger brother, Bernini—known for an explosive temper—reacted violently, attacking his brother and sending a servant to slash Costanza's face with a razor. What ultimately happened remains unclear, but Bernini was fined 3,000 scudi (a huge sum at a time when a sizable house in Rome could be rented for 50 scudi a year). The scandal caused Urban VIII to intervene and more or less command Bernini to settle down and marry, which he soon did, at age 40, in May of 1639. His wife, Caterina Tezio, the daughter of a prominent lawyer, would bear him 11 children, 9 of whom survived. Now ultra-respectable, he attended daily Mass for the last 40 years of his life.
Bernini's bust of Costanza is a work with few precedents. For one thing, women were not usually sculpted in marble unless they were nobility or the statues were for their tombs. And in those sculptures, they were typically portrayed in elaborate hairdos and rich dresses—not depicted informally, as Bernini had Costanza, clad in a skimpy chemise with her hair unstyled. "He takes out all the ornaments that were important to the 17th-century portrait and focuses on the person," says Bacchi. "You see a little of her breast, to think she is breathing, the crease of her neck, so that she seems to be moving." The portrait engages the viewer so intensely, Bacchi adds, "because it is just her expression, there is nothing to distract you." With her mouth slightly open and her head turned, Costanza is radiantly alive. In another way, too, the bust is exceptional. Marble was expensive. Bernini's portrait of Costanza is thought to be the first uncommissioned bust in art history made by the sculptor for his own enjoyment.
In a career that continued until paralysis stilled his hand shortly before his death, at 81, in 1680, Bernini enjoyed almost uninterrupted success. His only serious setback came in the 1640s, when the death of Urban VIII brought in a new pope, Innocent X, who favored Bernini's rivals, including the architect Francesco Borromini and the sculptor Alessandro Algardi. A high-profile architectural project for Bernini to add two bell towers to St. Peter's was canceled, requiring an already constructed tower to be torn down. But even Innocent X could not gainsay Bernini's talent. When the pope was commissioning a new fountain for the Piazza Navona, Bernini, uninvited, composed a model for it. Innocent X was brought into a room that contained the model and he was smitten. "The only way to resist executing his works is not to see them," he reportedly said. Featuring an obelisk, which seems to rise unsupported from a rough outcrop of travertine, around which real flowing water and muscular figures of marble disport, the Fountain of the Four Rivers is a city landmark to this day.
Bernini was always after the maximum theatrical impact. Indeed, along with his other talents, he was also a professional dramatist. In one of the plays that he wrote, he made a wall of water rush at his audience, diverting it through sluices at the last gasp-inducing moment. Another one of his offerings combined two plays proceeding simultaneously on a stage divided by a scrim and watched by two separate audiences; the stories cleverly interlocked, and each side was expected to overhear the other.
To a modern sensibility, Bernini the sculptor at times can seem too much the showman, rummaging through a bag of tricks to please his audience. He lived long enough to hear such criticisms. Notwithstanding his enormous celebrity (crowds gathered along his route to France in 1665, as if, the artist said, he were an elephant), he correctly predicted that his reputation would wane over time.
This pessimism may explain why Bernini was so intent upon stage-managing his biographies. It could also shed some light on one of his most renowned achievements, The Ecstasy of St. Teresa, which he executed for a side chapel in Rome's Church of Santa Maria della Vittoria from 1645 to 1652, and which he called his most beautiful creation. At its center is the white marble sculpture in which Teresa, convulsed in ecstatic pain, yields to an angel about to pierce her with the golden arrow of divine love. On either side of Teresa, Bernini placed a box with seats, of the kind found in theaters, containing four men. But in each box, only the man closest to Teresa looks at her. The others are chatting or, in one case, reading a book. Could Bernini have been anticipating a future in which his achievements would be similarly ignored? If so, he would be heartened to see his exuberant genius once again receiving its due.
A frequent contributor, Arthur Lubow is based in New York City. He wrote about the arts and culture of Bhutan in March 2008.
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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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