Showing posts with label Aesthetics of Decay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aesthetics of Decay. Show all posts

26.11.10

Some Images from Siena


Duomo interior, Siena



Duomo, Siena


Duomo, Siena


Duomo, Siena


Duomo, Siena


Duomo, Siena

Aesthetics of Decay - Part 3

Just across the piazza from the Duomo is the 1,000 year old hospital, Santa Maria della Scala. Incredibly, it functioned until 1998, when it was turned into a museum. The history and archeology of this site is deep and rich, and the building itself is fascinating. Here are just a few images from some of the oldest frescoes in the building.






November in Italy is wonderfully free of tourists. One gets a much better sense of the scale of the spaces when they are not packed with people. And the light is beautiful.


Piazza del Campo, Siena, November 20, 2010

4.7.09

Aesthetics of Decay - Part 2:
Cimabue & Giotto at Assisi
& Uccello's Green Cloister

For painters, the Basilica of St. Francis at Assisi is one of the most magnificent places in the world. Being there, it's easy to imagine this place as a hot-house of creative activity and experimentation in the late 13th and early 14th century, when the greatest painters in the world at that time, Cimabue and his student Giotto and all their crew, were throwing down on every surface on both levels of this cavernous cathedral.

Seven hundred years later, the color here is like no other place -- deeply rich, warm and sensuous, with a gentle gray/green patina on every surface -- it absolutely envelops your senses. What we see here is possibly just as overwhelming as it must have been when it was made. But the fact is, what we see now is not at all what was originally made, but rather a hybrid, a collaboration between the painters and the natural elements over time. There is no way to know what these paintings looked like originally -- what we do know is how they look now, which is unimaginably beautiful.

Cimabue, Crucifixion, 1280, Basilica of St. Francis, Assisi

Giotto, St. Francis Exorcising Demons, 1296-1304, Upper Church, Basilica of St. Francis, Assisi


Giotto, Sermon to the Birds, 1296-1304, Upper Church, Basilica of St. Francis, Assisi

In Florence, in the cloister of Santa Maria Novella is a remarkable early cycle of paintings by Uccello that are so weathered by time and moisture that some are almost gone. Here are a few of the less decayed fragments. Much like the Cimabues at Assisi, the color and value contrasts are transformed to a radical new state.

Paolo Uccello, Scenes from the Flood, 1432, Cloister, Santa Maria Novella, Florence



Paolo Uccello, Scenes from the Flood, 1432, Cloister, Santa Maria Novella, Florence

29.6.09

Aesthetics of Decay - Part 1:
Walls of Italy

The surfaces of Italy are seductive beyond imagination -- an ultimate collaboration between human construction and natural elements, seasoned and intensified by time. Although usually the product of futile attempts to stave off decay, the layers of history inevitably merge and continue to accumulate. It's easy for a painter to think they do this just for us!
















Note: no color enhancement was used in these images.