Legends of the Madonna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about Legends of the Madonna.

Legends of the Madonna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 431 pages of information about Legends of the Madonna.
of Bernardo Tasso, the father of Torquato Tasso, and then secretary to the prince of Salerno.  After remaining for many years over the high altar of the church, it was removed through the scruples of one of the Neapolitan archbishops, who was scandalized by the impropriety of placing the portraits of well-known personages in such a situation.”  The picture, once removed from its place, disappeared, and by some means found its way to the Louvre.  Andrea, who was one of the most distinguished of the scholars of Raphael, died in 1545.[1]

[Footnote 1:  This picture is thus described in the old catalogues of the Louvre (No. 1207); but is not to be found in that of Villot.]

8.  The composition by Rubens has all that scenic effect and dramatic movement which was characteristic of the painter.  The meeting takes place on a flight of steps leading to the house of Zacharias.  The Virgin wears a hat, as one just arrived from a journey; Joseph and Zacharias greet each other; a maiden with a basket on her head follows; and in the foreground a man unloads the ass.

I will mention two other example, each perfect in its way, in two most opposite styles of treatment.

9.  The first is the simple majestic composition of Albertinelli.  (Florence Gal.) The two women, standing alone under a richly sculptured arch, and relieved against the bright azure sky, embrace each other.  There are no accessories.  Mary is attired in dark-blue drapery, and Elizabeth wears an ample robe of a saffron or rather amber colour.  The mingled grandeur, power, and grace, and depth of expression in these two figures, are quite extraordinary; they look like what they are, and worthy to be mothers of the greatest of kings and the greatest of prophets.  Albertinelli has here emulated his friend Bartolomeo—­his friend, whom he so loved, that when, after the horrible execution of Savonarola, Bartolomeo, broken-hearted, threw himself into the convent of St. Mark, Albertinelli became almost distracted and desperate.  He would certainly, says Vasari, have gone into the same convent, but for the hatred be bore the monks, “of whom he was always saying the most injurious things.”

Through some hidden influence of intense sympathy, Albertinelli, though in point of character the very antipodes of his friend, often painted so like him, that his pictures—­and this noble picture more particularly—­might be mistaken for the work of the Frate.

* * * * *

10.  We will now turn to a conception altogether different, and equally a masterpiece; it is the small but exquisitely finished composition by Rembrandt. (Grosvenor Gal.) The scene is the garden in front of the house of Zacharias; Elizabeth is descending the steps in haste to receive and embrace with outstretched arms the Virgin Mary, who appears to have just alighted from her journey.  The aged Zacharias, supported by a youth, is seen following Elizabeth to welcome

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Legends of the Madonna from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.