Seven Young Men in Venice
We took my in laws to
Venice this week to celebrate my father in law’s eightieth birthday. The
tourists had fled the floods and the rain and left Venice to the Venetians,
most of whom were old and in furs so the city was quiet and slightly forlorn. I
did come across seven beautiful young men as we meandered however, all called
Sebastian and mostly Venetian, although one was passing through en route to
Mantua. The line up tells one more about the development of the venetian renaissance
than pages of writing can, have a look for yourself..
Jacobo Andrea da
Giovanni Andrea Palma Veronese Tintoretto
Bellini Murano Bellini Mantegna Vecchio 1564 1587
1464 1478 1468 1506 1524
A few things struck me
about the gang of youths: firstly how Saint Sebastian packed on the pounds over
the period. He starts looking positively skinny, is pretty perfect by the time
Giovanni Bellini portrays him, but is building up the muscle, more Venice Beach
than Venice, with Veronese and Tintoretto. To me the first three paintings are
all about the drawing, but colour takes precedence in the final three. The pose
also becomes progressively more dramatic, anguished and contorted, and by Tintoretto’s
image poor old Sebastian is being skewered on the altar of mannerism.
Lastly it struck me that,
rather like Venice itself, what a close knit claustrophobic world venetian
painting circles must have been. Jacobo was father to Giovanni and Gentile
Bellini, father in law to Mantegna, who married Giovanni and Gentile’s sister
Nicolosia, Giovanni taught Titian and Giorgione, Andrea da Murano imitated Giovanni,
Titian briefly taught Tintoretto, Tintoretto and Veronese were arch rivals
on several big commissions, Palma
Vecchio trained Boniface Veronese who trained Tintoretto after he fell out with
Titian. I wish someone would make a painters tree out of the tangle of
connections…
A great post about Venetian talent! Thanks Tessa.
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