From Shadow to Light, Michelangelo Merisi, known as Caravaggio
29 September 1571: Michelangle Merisi is born in Caravaggio. His father,
Fermo, is both architect and majordomo to Francesco Sforza, the Marquis
of Caravaggio :
- 1584:
- at 13, he is apprenticed for four years to Simone Perterzano in Milan;
- having completed his apprenticeship, he works a few years probably in Milan or elsewhere in Lombard. - 1592:
- arrival in Rome at 21 - he works for Cavaliere d'Arpino
- leads an extremely frugal existence
- meets Valentin, an art dealer located near S. Luigi dei Francesi
- introduced to Cardinal del Monte - 1593:
- Boy Bitten by a Lizard
- takes up lodgings at the Cardinal's residence, receiving room, board, and a salary
- The Fortune-teller
- Basket of Fruit
- last secular works. - 1597, as of this year, Caravaggio devotes himself exclusively to religious paintings.
- 1598: receives a commission for 3 paintings for the Contarelli Chapel (S. Luigi dei Francesi)
in Rome, illustrating the life of Saint Matthew
- 19 November 1600: complaint lodged against him for assault and battery against the painter G. Spamba da Montepulciano
- 7 February 1600: complaint lodged against him for assault and battery against Flavio Canonico, sergeant at the Château Saint-Ange
- 12 October 1604: denounced for throwing stones at the night watch, via del Babuino
- 1604: the painting Entombment is hung on the altar of Santa Maria in Vallicella.
- 12 May 1605: arrested for illegal carrying of firearms
- during a "four to four" brawl, he kills Ranuccio Tammasoni da Terni.
- flees Rome for Palestrina, to the home of Prince M. Clonna, the Marquis da Caravaggio's brother-in-law.
- paints Death of the Virgin - flees to Naples.
- goes from Naples to Malta, where "he has good customers": the Knights of the Order of St. John.
- paints Beheading of St. John the Baptist for the cathedral
-6 October: alerted by rumors from Rome, the knights carry out an investigation of Caravaggio; summoned to appear before the Order, he is expelled from their ranks and driven out of Malta on December 1. -he reappears in Sicily, Syracuse, Messina, and Palermo.
- the clergy of the Crociferi Church in Messina records the acquisition of the Raising of Lazarus
- Caravaggio reappears in Naples, where he is gravely wounded upon leaving the Cerriglio tavern.
- informed of his imminent pardon, Caravaggio sails off to Porto Ercole (Spanish enclave on Tuscan coast); he crosses over the boundary of the Papal States, where he is arrested and then released
- as narrated by Baglione in his chronicles of the period: "Once released, he could no longer find the felucca. Furious and desperate, he ran up and down the beach, sweltering under the sun and scanning the horizon for the boat carrying off all his meager belongings.
At noon he suffered a fever attack and lay down.
Without any human assistance, over almost three days, he died as he had lived,
miserably. It was July 18th. In Rome, his pardon had been granted the day before!"
An extraordinary personage. One of the most colorful personalities in the history of painting:
- A genius in all he created
- Leading a life of debauchery, drinking, and brawls
- Womanizer
- A murderer
- An exile, a wanderer, a solitary figure
- Revolutionary in everything he undertook
- A romantic figure before his time
- Karl von Mandel, Giulio Mancini, Giovanni Baglion, exegetes of this artist, paint a black picture of Caravaggio as a social misfit with a turbulent and provocative character.
- Bellori: "His temperament encouraged his dark side, to match his turbulent and provocative nature."
- Poussin: "He destroyed the art of painting."
- Cardinal del Monte: "He had as much trouble painting flowers as figures, since he lacked any preconceived distinction between the beautiful and the ugly, the noble and the base."
- It was not until the Milan exhibition of 1951 that, at last, this artist's oeuvre came to reveal the complexity of his personality:
- It became clear above all that he was intensely a product of his times;
- He was born in the year of the massacre on St Bartholomew's Day in Paris;
- He died in the year of the assassination of Henry IV.
