Fra Angelico’s frescoes represent a revolutionary moment in the development of the Renaissance and Western Art. He was an active participant in the renaissance of the arts that took place in Florence and which formulated a new way of seeing that, in time, came to dominate Western art until the modern age. Using psychology and perspective, Fra Angelico’s frescoes are a radical first step towards realism within Western art; his Annunciation being the first Florentine altarpiece in the Renaissance style to use perspective in organising the space and acute psychological insight in his portrayal of characters.
Yet, because Fra Angelico painted his frescoes on the Life of Christ for the meditations of the brothers at the Convento di San Marco in Florence, his images also function as windows into the divine – in other words, as icons.
It is this aspect of Fra Angelico’s art that Robert Polidori has observed and highlighted in a series of painterly photographs taken in 2010 of the restored frescoed interiors in the 15th Century San Marco Convent. Polidori is an acclaimed photographer of human habitats, particularly interior spaces, in ways that mark the imprint of past lives. In these images, he reveals the iconic nature of these frescoes by viewing them through openings and against openings, noting that they are created within window-like shapes and alongside openings, whether windows or doors.
In these photographs we are always made aware of deeper space beyond the central focus or frame of the image. This something beyond which we glimpse through the openings that Polidori includes within his images is a synergistic parallel to the function of Fra Angelico’s frescoes, which, through meditation, are intended to connect the brothers with the Christ whose life is depicted so compellingly on the walls of these cells.
Awareness of recessional space is most apparent in Cells 38 and 39 which were built as a double cell, at the end of the corridor for lay brothers, for Cosimo de' Medici, who belonged to the community by virtue of his patronage. Cosimo was an Italian banker and politician, a member of the Medici family which ruled Florence during much of the Italian Renaissance. In 1437, Cosimo decided to rebuild Convento di San Marco entrusting the work to Michelozzo di Bartolomeo Michelozzi and the decoration of the walls, carried out between 1439 and 1444, to Giovanni of Fiesole, known as Fra Angelico, and his assistants including Benozzo Gozzoli. It is known that Cosimo loved to pray and meditate in these spaces, yet this wider knowledge of his piety and modesty may also have strengthened his power and legacy. In this cell, therefore, politics, religion and artistry combine in a creative tension which exemplifies the Renaissance.
This is the most spacious and elaborately decorated of all the cells. On the entrance wall of the lower room (Cell 38) Fra Angelico painted the crucified Christ against a ground of costly lapis lazuli, rather than the bare plaster background found in the other cells. Polidori views this image from outside through the frame of a circular window, then, from within, shows us the same image alongside the stairs and doorway by which Cosimo ascended to Cell 39. There his gaze was met by The Adoration of the Magi and the image of Christ as Man of Sorrows in a recessed tabernacle immediately below. Polidori gives us a ravishing view of these paintings created by Fra Angelico’s assistants while ensuring that we also glimpse the openings above and below the doubled images in this second cell.
Polidori’s highly detailed, large-format colour photographs are created with long exposures and using natural light. Through their detailed command of colour, texture, light and shade, these images invoke stillness and contemplation thereby mirroring the function of Fra Angelico’s frescoes and turning this gallery, with its wealthy patrons, into a cell for the duration of this exhibition.
For this transition to occur, however, we, as viewer, need to mirror the attitude and openness of the brothers as they prayed before Fra Angelico’s frescoes. This is the import of Polidori’s title for this show, which emphasises the necessity of response and receptivity on our part, as viewers, if we are to go beyond the beauty of these photographs and enter the history, tradition and reality of peaceful prayerfulness to which they connect.
Robert Polidori: Fra Angelico/Opus Operantis, Flowers Gallery, 21 Cork Street, London W1S 3LZ. 4 September – 12 October 2019
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Nicholas Wilton.
Showing posts with label san marco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label san marco. Show all posts
Friday, 11 October 2019
Review: Robert Polidori Fra Angelico / Opus Operantis
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Monday, 19 August 2019
Artlyst - Robert Polidori: Fra Angelico/Opus Operantis
My latest article for Artlyst previews an exhibition of photographs taken by Robert Polidori when he was invited to photograph the restored frescoed interiors in the 15th Century San Marco Convent, as well as the building itself:
this series of photographs Fra Angelico/Opus Operantis present what Polidari has described as an idealized view of time and place as it exists in the mind’s eye, delivering images that invoke stillness and contemplation through their detailed command of colour, texture, light and shade. In this way, his images mirror the contemplative nature of the San Marco frescoes, whether those designed for communal contemplation or those for private meditation in the individual cells.'
Polidori 'was an inspired choice, as he believes that rooms act as vessels of memory. As an acclaimed photographer of human habitats, interior spaces and urban environments, his images reflect on notions of memory and history embedded within architecture ...
this series of photographs Fra Angelico/Opus Operantis present what Polidari has described as an idealized view of time and place as it exists in the mind’s eye, delivering images that invoke stillness and contemplation through their detailed command of colour, texture, light and shade. In this way, his images mirror the contemplative nature of the San Marco frescoes, whether those designed for communal contemplation or those for private meditation in the individual cells.'
The exhibition will be at Flowers Gallery from 4 September to 12 October.
My other Artlyst articles and interviews are:
My other Artlyst articles and interviews are:
- Art, Faith, Church Patronage and Modernity
- Contemplating the Spiritual in Contemporary Art
- Mat Collishaw Challenges Faith Perspectives With Ushaw Installation
- Waterloo Festival Launches At St. John’s Waterloo
- John Bellany Alan Davie Spiritual Joy and Magic
- RIFT Unites 17 Art and Science MA Graduates At Central St Martins
- Visionary Cities: Michael Takeo Magruder – British Library
- Van Gogh’s Religious Journey Around London
- William Congdon Holy Sites And The Kettle’s Yard Connection
- Mark Dean Premieres Pastiche Mass At Banqueting Hall Chelsea College of Arts
- John Kirby: The Torment Underlying The Civilised Facade
- Curating Spiritual Sensibilities In Changing Times
- Ken Currie: Protest Defeat And Victory
- Bosco Sodi: A Moment Of Genesis
- Bill Viola And The Art Of Contemplation
- Art In Churches 2018: Spiritual Combinations Explored
- Sister Wendy Beckett – A Reminiscence
- Marleen Hengelaar-Rookmaaker On The Legacy Of ArtWay
- Guido Guidi: Per Strada Flowers Gallery London
- Peter Howson Artlyst Interview
- Peter Howson: The play is over – Flowers Gallery
- Camille Henrot: Scientific History And Creation Story Mash Up
- Nicola Green Explores Recent And Contemporary Religious Leaders – St Martin-in-the-Fields
- Art And The Consequences Of War Explored In Two Exhibitions
- Helaine Blumenfeld Translating Her Vision
- Alastair Gordon A Testament To His Faith
- Sacred Noise: Explores Religion, Faith And Divinity
- Bill Viola: Quiet Contemplative Video Installation St Cuthbert’s Church Edinburgh
- The ground-breaking work of Sister Corita Kent
- Katrina Moss Chaiya Art Awards Interview: Where is God in our 21st century world?
- Picasso To Souza: The Crucifixion Imagery Rarely Exhibited
- Apocalypse Now: Michael Takeo Magruder Interviewed
- Jonathan Anderson: Religious Inspirations Behind Modernism
- Michael Takeo Magruder: De / coding the Apocalypse – Panacea Museum
- Giorgio Griffa: The Golden Ratio And Inexplicable Knowledge
- Arabella Dorman Unveils New Installation At St James Church Piccadilly
- Can Art Transform Society?
- Art Awakening Humanity Conference Report
- Central St Martins in the Fields Design Then And Now
- The Sacramental And Liturgical Nature Of Conceptual Art
- Caravan – An Interview With Rev Paul Gordon Chandler On Arts Peacebuilding
- Art Awakening Humanity Alexander de Cadenet Interviewed
- Polish Art In Britain Centenary Marked At London’s Ben Uri Gallery
- Michael Pendry New Installation Lights Up St Martin In The Fields;
- Mark Dean Projects Stations of the Cross Videos On Henry Moore Altar;
- Refugee Artists Learning from The Lives Of Others;
- The Religious Impulses Of Robert Rauschenberg;
- The Christian Science Connection Within The British Modern Art Movement;
- Artists Rebranding The Christmas Tree Tradition;
- Art Impacted - A Radical Response To Radicalisation;
- The Art of St Martin-in-the-Fields; and
- Was Caravaggio A Good Christian?
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Auckland Catholic Music Schola - Pange lingua.
Auckland Catholic Music Schola - Pange lingua.
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