Tag Archives: Florence Duomo

Happy and Hopeful 2018 to All

Carefree children dancing: a nice image for the New Year.

These large relief panels by Luca della Robbia were commissioned in 1431 for the organ loft in Florence’s Cathedral.

I’d never get near the organ loft, so I’m glad somebody made the decision to install them in the newly-renovated Museo dell’Opera del Duomo, just across the street.

There are ten of them, with the overall title “Cantoria.” They’re designed to reflect the joy of music, and they make me think of the joy of new beginnings.

In our world, of course, being a child is not all sweetness and light. It never was.

I loved this very large painting by the French artist Jules Bastien-Lepage, 1880. He was not as well known as other French painters, but he was a leader in the developing Naturalist school, where the point was to see the world as it really was. He influenced later painters like Claude Monet. This painting is in the wonderful French collection in Copenhagen’s Glyptotec.

The title is “The Beggar.” In it, an elderly beggar dressed in rags turns away from a doorway. Did he receive something in his bag? Maybe, but nothing that would change his life. The woman in the background is already occupied with something else, finished with the encounter one way or the other. But the little girl in the blue dress would like to do more for him. Her face registers shock and profound sorrow and reluctance to see the old man leave. She hasn’t yet learned any of the rationalizations adults use when we turn away from someone else’s suffering.

I hang out with kids every chance I get. I love their energy and open minds. I don’t want them sitting quietly in rows–I want them up and moving and laughing.

I’m often “the teacher” and therefore the one presumably imparting wisdom. But children are the ones with wisdom. Kids are the true Superheroes who ALWAYS come out in favor of honesty, fairness, generosity, and including everybody. And they always manage to create their own fun, no matter how intent the adults are on a serious lesson. They’re our future.

I think a good beginning for 2018 would be to talk to our children about what they’d like for our world, and then follow their lead. What if we put them in charge for awhile? Happy and hopeful New Year!

How Brunelleschi Gave Us Perspective

Filippo Brunelleschi, the genius who figured out how to build the spectacular octagonal dome of the Florence Cathedral, is often credited with inventing linear perspective around 1420.  Actually, his great rival Lorenzo Ghiberti would beg to differ.  So would the Arab mathemetician known as Alhazen, who lived around 965-1040.  A copy of Alhazen’s work on the subject, with notes by Ghiberti, is in the Vatican Library.  The ancient Greeks and Romans had the knowledge too, but it was lost in the Middle Ages.  So Brunelleschi’s work was really more of a rediscovery.

What exactly is linear perspective?  It is the technique of making an image in two dimensions–a flat surface–appear to be in three dimensions, with depth.  As a not-very-good, self-taught painter, I’m always looking for ways to make my paintings less bad.  Awhile ago, I bought a kit that promised to help me:

Linear Perspective Kit

Linear Perspective Kit

The kit consists of various frames and grids.  If I had the patience to actually work with the kit, I could create more realistic paintings by establishing a vanishing point, a horizon line, and accurate diagonals.  While writing about Filippo Brunelleschi, I realized that the illustration on the cover of my kit depicts the master’s famous demonstration of linear perspective.  The building shown on the cover is the Baptistery of Florence.

Florence Baptistery

Florence Baptistery

The hexagonal building stands directly across from the Florence Duomo. Brunelleschi stood in the doorway of the still-unfinished cathedral.  Using the rediscovered calculations and techniques of perspective, he painted a very accurate picture of the Baptistery.  (We could take a photo, but there were no cameras in his day). Then he poked a hole in the canvas and looked through the back of the canvas at a mirror.  When he quickly moved the mirror away, the viewer could see how accurate the painting was.  Very quickly, every Renaissance painter worth his salt began using the technique.  It was part of the new realism that swept the art world after centuries of art that was much more symbolic than realistic.

The Baptistery was constructed sometime between 1059 and 1128.  Right up into the 19th century, this was the place every Florentine Catholic was baptized. In about 1400, new doors were needed.  The city fathers held a competition for the plum job of creating bronze doors for this very important building.  Brunelleschi was 21 at the time; Ghiberti was barely 20.  The younger pup won.  Ghiberti ended up working on these doors, plus a subsequent set, for pretty much the rest of his life.  It took him 20 years to finish the first set of doors and 25 more years for the next set.

Brunelleschi was disappointed; this may have been one reason he turned his talents to architecture and design.  Personally, I think he was lucky he lost this competition. It enabled him to enter and win the one for the cathedral dome.  Both men became famous and had illustrious, well-paid careers.  But today, it is hard to fully appreciate Ghiberti’s work even when standing right in front of the doors.  We’ve lost our taste for intricate bronze reliefs.  Brunelleschi, on the other hand, got to spend 16 years on a complex project in the open air of Florence, while everyone in the city discussed and admired his work.  Today, every visitor can admire the Duomo from countless vantage points in and around the city.

The most famous image of Brunelleschi is a large statue that shows him gazing up at the crowning achievement of his life, the dome of the cathedral.

Photo by Richardfabi, released to public domain

Photo by Richardfabi, released to public domain

Leonardo da Vinci remarked, “Perspective is the rein and rudder of painting.”  Now, maybe I had better get that kit off the shelf and get to work painting.

Join me next time for more explorations into the art and history of Europe!