Rebuilding The Renaissance

Rocky Ruggiero

  • 18 minutes 56 seconds
    Episode 275 - Caravaggio’s “Flagellation”

    Located in the Capodimonte Museum in Naples, Italy, Caravaggio painted the “Flagellation” in 1607 while he was hiding out in Naples because he was wanted for murder in Rome. The “Flagellation” is dramatically sadistic scene of imminent torture set – like so many of Caravaggio’s paintings - in a dark shallow theatrical space.

    24 April 2024, 10:30 am
  • 20 minutes 21 seconds
    Episode 274 - Caravaggio’s “Seven Acts of Mercy”

    When Caravaggio arrived in Naples as a fugitive on the run from papal justice in 1606, he immediately began to receive commissions. One of his first was for a charitable organization called the “Pio Monte della Misericordia.” This organization had just built a church with seven altars upon which seven separate paintings illustrating the “Seven Acts of Mercy” were to be placed. In true impetuous Caravaggio fashion, he produced a single beautiful painting that represented all seven acts!

    17 April 2024, 10:30 am
  • 32 minutes 39 seconds
    Episode 273 - Answers to Open Questions XX

    From similar faces in the Scrovegni Chapel, to identifying Judas in Veronese’s “Feast in the House of Levi,” to the symbolic gestures of the apostles in Caravaggio’s “Supper at Emmaus,” to the “Isleworth Mona Lisa,” to my advice to a young person about life and much, much more - this episode answers the very questions that you ask me about the great art, artists and history of the Italian Renaissance – and the meaning of life!

    10 April 2024, 10:30 am
  • 20 minutes 31 seconds
    Episode 272 - Caravaggio’s “David with the Head of Goliath”

    Painted shortly after Caravaggio killed a man in Rome and was a fugitive from justice, the “David with the Head of Goliath” is today located in the Borghese Gallery in Rome, Italy. The painting was given to Cardinal Scipione Borghese in hopes that he could convince his uncle, Pope Paul V, to pardon Caravaggio who was wanted dead or alive.

    3 April 2024, 10:30 am
  • 20 minutes 54 seconds
    Episode 271 - Caravaggio’s “Supper at Emmaus” (2nd Version)

    Located in the Brera Gallery in Milan, Italy, Caravaggio’s 2nd “Supper at Emmaus” was painted in the immediate aftermath of Caravaggio’s murder of Ranuccio Tommasoni on the streets of Rome. A wounded Caravaggio was a fugitive from justice and hiding out from the authorities in the hills surrounding Rome when he painted his 2nd “Supper”.  The painting clearly reflects the dramatically changed circumstances of Caravaggio’s life and mark a turning point in his career.

    27 March 2024, 10:30 am
  • 17 minutes 56 seconds
    Episode 270 - Caravaggio: Wanted Dead or Alive

    O May 28, 1606, Caravaggio stabbed and killed a man named Ranuccio Tommasoni in Rome, allegedly over an unpaid wager. Discover the details of the homicide that changed Caravaggio’s life forever and turned him into a fugitive from justice.

    20 March 2024, 10:30 am
  • 19 minutes 54 seconds
    Episode 269 - Caravaggio’s St. Jerome (Borghese Gallery)

    In 1605, Caravaggio painted an image of St. Jerome for Cardinal Scipione Borghese, and the painting is still located in the Borghese Gallery in Rome, Italy. Caravaggio’s depiction of the Father of the Church is a very quiet and intimate one, where we see a scholar in a sparsely furnished room consumed with the enormous task of translating the Hebrew Bible into Latin.

    13 March 2024, 10:30 am
  • 21 minutes 23 seconds
    Episode 268 - Caravaggio’s “Madonna of the Palafrenieri”

    Painted in 1605 for the chapel of the Papal grooms, known as “Palafrenieri,” in the new Basilica of St. Peter, Caravaggio’s painting was removed after only a few days because it was considered indecorous. The stark nudity of the Christ Child, the bulging breasts of the Virgin Mary (who was modeled from a well-known prostitute!) and the unflattering representation of St. Anne (patron saint of the grooms) were most likely the reasons the painting was thought to be inappropriate for the most important church in the Catholic world.

    6 March 2024, 11:30 am
  • 22 minutes 58 seconds
    Episode 267 - Caravaggio’s “Deposition”

    Located in the Pinacoteca of the Vatican Museums, Caravaggio’s “Deposition” was thought by many of his contemporaries to be the painter’s greatest work.  The dramatic representation of very real-looking biblical characters handling the dead body of Christ in a shallow, tenebrously-lit foreground space makes for a very moving visual narrative.

    28 February 2024, 11:30 am
  • 22 minutes 18 seconds
    Episode 266 - Caravaggio’s “Death of the Virgin”

    Commissioned in 1601 for a chapel in the Roman church of Santa Maria della Scala, Caravaggio’s “Death of the Virgin” was rejected by the Carmelite friars of the church. While some believe it was because of the stark and indecorous representation of the dead Virgin Mary, one of Caravaggio’s biographers suggests instead it was because Caravaggio used a well-known courtesan as his model for Mary.

    21 February 2024, 11:30 am
  • 22 minutes 34 seconds
    Episode 265 - Caravaggio’s “Madonna of Loreto”

    Located in the Augustinian church of Sant ’Agostino in Rome, Italy, the “Madonna of Loreto” is one of Caravaggio’s most beautiful paintings. It was painted for the Cavalletti family in 1604 and depicts a barefoot Virgin Mary (who was modeled from a well-known prostitute) standing in a rundown contemporary Roman doorway carrying the Christ child who blesses two peasant pilgrims. The stark realism and lack of pretense made it very popular amongst the masses, who, according to one of Caravaggio’s biographers, “made a great cackle over it.”

    14 February 2024, 11:30 am
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