Hermitage ~ part 14 – Caravaggio, Michelangelo Merisi da - The Lute-Player
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COMMENTS: 7 Ответы
Великолепно!
Просто чудо!
Сегодня таких картин и художников нет.
In 500 years the violin has not changed much.
Прелестно
Склоняю голову пред чудом...
Поскольку это одна из самых известных картин Караваджо, то добавить что-либо просто невозможно. Мастер, он и есть Мастер, а не какой-нибудь Шагал.
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The foreground is cluttered with items that amplify the theme of music and the ephemeral nature of sensuous pleasures. A vase of flowers, vibrant with life, sits on the left, while a collection of fruits, some ripe and some beginning to decay, are scattered across the surface. Amongst these, a violin and bow rest upon the open musical sheets. The play of light and shadow, a signature of Caravaggio, highlights the lushess of the fruits and the detail of the musical instruments, while casting the background into deep obscurity.
The subtexts of the painting are rich and multi-layered. The presence of both the lute and the violin, along with the musical scores, is a clear nod to the art of music. However, the inclusion of fruits and flowers, some of which are past their prime, introduces the theme of vanitas – the transience of mortal life and the inevitability of decay. This contrasts with the beauty and sweetness of the music, suggesting that while earthly pleasures are fleeting, artistic endeavors, like music, can offer a more enduring form of beauty and expression. The young lute players introspective pose and downward gaze could also be interpreted as a reflection of the transient nature of youth and beauty, and the melancholic contemplation of mortality. The painting might therefore be seen as a memento mori, a reminder of lifes brevity and the importance of appreciating its fleeting moments.