An Ugly Soul. Figurations, Transfiguration, Misinterpretations and Fakes of Caravaggio’s Physiognomy
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2024
Abstract:
The critical success of Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio has been notoriously
flagged by a long disesteem, a real «damnatio memoriae» which ended only at the
half of XXth Century with the rediscovery of the Master by Roberto Longhi. Before
that, most writers who tackled the issue of Caravaggio’s painting had tried to find a
causal relationship between style of the Artist and its violent and antisocial behavior.
It is interesting that this mystification, that went as far as to falsify his biographical
data to substantiate his image as a «killer-painter», concerned also an aspect of the
critical about the Artist that is still little know. Starting from Bellori, and all along the
XVIIth and XVIIIth Century, the Artist’s face – that accompanies many biographies
written in that time – has undergone a metamorphosis up to assume a decidedly
far-fetched appearance. Francesco Paolo Campione’s essay retraces, on the basis
of the semiotic relationship between portrait and «Vita» already established by
Vasari, a review of the interpretations of Michelangelo Merisi’s «true effigy», from
deformations implemented especially during the XVIIIth Century until the total
reconfiguration of his face in a perfect orthodox key, that in some ways is a prelude
to its definitive aesthetic rehabilitation.
Tipologia CRIS:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Caravaggio, Physiognomic, Portraits, Art Criticism, Misinterpretation,
Ugliness, Wickedness
Elenco autori:
Campione, Francesco Paolo
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