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Great Art Cities: Rome - Caravaggio, Bernini and Pozzo

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    Rome is the birthplace of Baroque,
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    the highly ornate and elaborate style
    of architecture, art, and design
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    that flourished in Europe
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    in the 17th and first half
    of the 18th century.
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    Unlike the Renaissance,
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    which was all about control
    and perfect balance,
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    the era was famous for its dramatic flair
    and sense of movement.
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    The Baroque style was also
    the first global art form.
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    It spread from Rome
    throughout Europe and to Asia.
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    The upside of the Roman Catholic Church's
    immense wealth
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    has been its support
    of hundreds of artists,
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    including the three
    we are looking at in this video:
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    Michelangelo, Marisi de Caravaggio
    Andrea Pozzo and Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
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    In this episode, Great Cities Explained
    goes outside the galleries and museums,
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    and inside three Baroque churches
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    that still house their work today
    and cost nothing to visit.
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    Caravaggio, Bernini and Pozzo
    were born into a world
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    that had been shaken
    by the Protestant Reformation,
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    which had significantly weakened
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    the CatholicChurch's influence
    across Europe.
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    The Protestant Reformation began in 1517
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    when Martin Luther challenged
    the Catholic church with his 95 thesis,
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    criticizing indulgences
    and clerical corruption.
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    Rooted in disputes
    over salvation and scripture,
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    it spread across Europe
    via the printing press
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    and through other reformers.
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    The movement fractured Christianity,
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    eventually sparking religious wars
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    and reshaping Europe's religious
    and political landscape.
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    One of the weapons the Catholic Church
    used in the fight against protestantism
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    was art.
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    It's one thing for the church
    to tell priests
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    what to teach and to write
    new laws and new decrees,
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    but they also had
    to transmit this information
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    to the everyday person on the street.
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    And to do that they put these ideas
    in the place that people know best,
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    where they go to celebrate their faith
    - on the walls of the churches.
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    The church's counter-reformation movement
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    demanded that art be used as a tool
    to inspire faith, devotion,
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    and more importantly
    to emotionally engage.
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    The Church would use powerful imagery
    to reinforce Catholic Doctrine,
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    inspire faith, and counteract
    the spread of Protestantism.
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    It decreed that art should be clear,
    direct, emotional, and didactic,
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    conveying religious messages in a way
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    that was accessible to all,
    including the illiterate
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    Baroque art was a direct result
    of this need for works
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    that were characterized
    by emotional intensity,
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    religious ecstasy, suffering, and triumph.
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    And Rome, the spiritual and cultural
    capital of the Christian world,
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    became the epicentre of Baroque art,
    architecture, and culture,
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    during the 17th century.
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    Many artists, as you know, are troubled,
    difficult and sometimes problematic.
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    Caravaggio was someone who certainly
    liked the seedy underbelly of life,
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    and is sometimes referred to
    as "Baroque's bad boy",
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    in itself a problematic term.
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    He had over 40 police records,
    mostly for violent activities,
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    and he was eventually condemned to death
    after killing a man,
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    necessitating spending
    most of his life as a fugitive.
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    This might make him
    a terrible human being,
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    but in a period of complete uncertainty
    about the sacraments,
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    about what part Saints played,
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    about what we believe and why,
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    it also made him the perfect artist
    to express the incredible tension
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    that was so prevalent
    in this period of the post-reformation.
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    He was also the best qualified artist
    to portray the calling of a sinner.
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    By the late 1590s Caravaggio
    was working in Rome,
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    trying to make a name for himself
    in the competitive art scene.
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    Already known for his rebellious nature,
    and rough temperament,
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    which often clashed
    with his professional ambitions,
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    Caravaggio was struggling
    to get commissions.
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    Then in 1599,
    after another artist dropped out,
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    he was asked to create two scenes
    from the life of St Matthew
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    for the Conterelli chapel
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    in the Baroque Church
    of San Luigi de Francesi,
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    the National Church of France in Rome.
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    It is these paintings
    more than any others,
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    that establish Caravaggio.
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    They marked the moment when the mannerist
    conventions of the late 16th century:
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    rational, intellectual,
    perhaps a little artificial,
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    give way to the Baroque.
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    The two huge paintings were to stand
    either side of a statue of St Matthew
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    by Flemish artist Jakob Coebert,
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    but the clients rejected
    the finished statue
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    and Caravaggio was asked
    to create a third painting,
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    as a centrepiece above the altar,
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    showing St Matthew writing the Gospel
    under the guidance of an angel.
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    The first painting in the trio
    is the Calling of St Matthew,
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    which depicts the moment in the Bible
    when Christ calls Matthew,
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    a tax collector, to follow him.
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    The scene is set
    in a dimly lit Roman tavern,
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    the sort of dingy place Caravaggio
    and his friends hung out in,
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    with figures dressed in the same type
    of 17th century contemporary clothing
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    that the artist and his friends war.
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    In fact, Caravaggio often included
    his friends in his paintings.
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    Here is the artist Mario Minitti,
    who appears in several of his works
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    and like Caravaggio was part
    of the seedy underbelly of Roman life.
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    But why does Caravaggio
    show them in modern clothing?
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    It would be like walking
    into a church today
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    and seeing a painting
    with Christ contemporaries
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    in t-shirts, jeans, and sneakers.
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    Later on, Caravaggio will include
    17th century armour
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    in another illustration
    of the Gospel story.
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    It is a deliberate choice
    to bridge the gap
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    between the biblical story
    and the viewer's reality.
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    This anachronism, to our eyes
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    was totally understandable
    to a 17th century audience,
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    and in line
    with counter-reformation thinking.
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    It told the viewer
    that the possibility of redemption
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    was as relevant in their present
    as it was in Biblical times.
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    Christ and Peter in the painting, however,
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    are both barefoot and dressed
    in the more familiar robes
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    we know from Biblical paintings,
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    to help distinguish
    between the divine and the secular.
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    Christ gestures towards Matthew
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    who sits at a table counting coins
    with other tax collectors.
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    The moment captures Matthew's surprise
    and his inner conflict
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    as he realizes he is being chosen.
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    Structural composition serves
    as the backbone of a painting
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    and plays a crucial role
    in guiding the viewer's experience,
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    conveying meaning
    and creating aesthetic harmony.
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    With so much going on
    in all three paintings
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    the structure and the symmetry
    is important.
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    This one is almost square.
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    And then within it, there are
    a series of squares and rectangles,
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    giving it coherence.
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    It also has a series of diagonals
    starting from the light behind Christ,
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    another diagonal follows
    the young boy's sword,
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    another St Peter's leg,
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    and yet another the leg angle
    of the boy on the left.
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    Matthew's call is shown through
    the extreme sense of light and shadow
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    we know from Caravaggio's
    signature use of chiaroscuro,
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    something I have discussed
    in my other video on Caravaggio.
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    A beam of light comes
    from behind the head of Christ
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    who stands to the right
    partially obscured behind St Peter,
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    and the light illuminates the group
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    - but not through the window
    that is visible,
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    but from an unseen supernatural source,
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    underscoring the idea of redemption
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    that even a sinner like a tax collector
    in a den of sin,
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    can be transformed
    into something extraordinary.
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    A large part of the painting
    is blank space, or rather light.
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    And as I've discussed before,
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    light is used in religious art
    as a metaphor for the presence of God,
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    divine intervention or,
    in this case spiritual awakening.
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    The light hits all of the men
    around the table
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    but a choice is being made
    by each individual
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    whether or not to look into the light.
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    These two men are more engrossed
    in material concerns
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    - counting coins -
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    and their indifference to Christ,
    or their "spiritual blindness"
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    is there as a contrast
    to Matthew's moment of recognition.
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    There is a lot less certainty than we see
    in many other treatments of the theme.
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    Matthew himself is not sure
    who is being called,
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    as indicated
    by both his quizzical expression
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    and the way he points to himself
    as if to ask: "Is it me?"
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    The rather undecided way
    Christ points towards Matthew
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    adds to this ambiguity,
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    and as we see from this x-ray,
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    it was something Caravaggio
    experimented with.
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    The hands of Christ, Peter, and Matthew
    are strikingly similar.
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    Christ's hand pointing
    towards Matthew is the highest,
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    followed by Peter's,
    which emphasises Christ's selection,
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    and finally Matthew's.
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    All three share the same gesture,
    with subtle variations,
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    adding to the symmetry of the composition.
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    It is no coincidence that Christ's gesture
    echoes the hand of Adam
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    in Michelangelo's "Creation of Adam"
    in the Sistine chapel,
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    perhaps emphasising
    Christ's Divine Mission,
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    while subtly connecting
    the act of calling Matthew
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    to the act of Creation itself,
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    suggesting that Christ is giving Matthew
    a new life, a spiritual one.
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    Matthew and his friends clothing
    is made from rich fabrics
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    — silks, velvets and brocades —
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    the most beautiful clothes
    of the 17th century,
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    and along with the coins,
    these luxuries all indicate
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    that should Matthew accept Christ calling,
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    there is a lot to be given up.
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    The martyrdom
    on the facing wall of the chapel
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    tells us that it cost him everything.
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    The inspiration of St Matthew
    is the centrepiece
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    and represents the moment
    of Matthew's inspiration
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    to write the Gospel.
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    The first thing to notice
    is the contrast between the two figures.
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    The angel comes down in a spiral
    and looks like a beam of light,
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    while Matthew is projecting
    heat and warmth,
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    as if he is on fire with inspiration
    delivered from Heaven.
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    This was not the first version.
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    Caravaggio originally created
    this image for the chapel
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    which was rejected by the church,
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    because it showed St Matthew
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    as an uneducated, unkempt
    peasant with dirty feet.
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    The painting was destroyed
    in the Second World War,
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    but this is an original photo
    which is sometimes colorised.
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    Caravaggio's inclusion of dirty feet
    into a sacred context
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    was radical, raw, and authentic,
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    a move away from the idealised
    religious imagery,
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    and a message
    that Holiness and Divinity
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    could be found in the lowliest
    and most unexpected places.
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    He always used life models
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    and often used poor
    or workingclass people,
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    beggars, street-walkers, criminals,
    and manual labourers,
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    again emphasising realism
    and the divine within the ordinary.
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    The use of lower class,
    less than perfect models
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    to portray holy figures,
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    is sometimes interpreted as blasphemous
    by modern writers,
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    but this is not true.
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    While there were critics
    of Caravaggio at the time,
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    he was simply following
    counter-reformation ideas.
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    By showing the physical
    earthly realities of life,
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    the dirt and the clutter,
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    he emphasised the human,
    humble nature of his subjects,
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    tapping into the church's aims
    of appealing directly to the masses.
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    In this second version Caravaggio painted,
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    instead of being
    fully controlled by the angel,
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    - as he appears in the first version,
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    it shows Matthew kneeling,
    with a strong weathered appearance,
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    leaning forward as if deeply
    immersed in the act of writing.
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    The angel above him
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    delicately encourages or inspires,
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    and counts on his hands
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    how many verses Matthew has completed
    - rather than dictates.
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    The interaction
    between the angel and Matthew,
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    deliberately fluid,
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    emphasises that this is
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    a collaborative process
    of divine inspiration,
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    rather than one of full control
    of an illiterate peasant.
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    Caravaggio connects
    the two figures visually:
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    Matthew's bent right arm
    matches the Angel's left,
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    and the curve of his left arm
    matches the Angel's right,
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    their hands are close together,
    their shoulders are parallel.
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    Both lean forward onto the right hand,
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    both raise their left leg,
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    and both stretch out their right leg.
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    Unlike in the previous version
    of this episode,
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    the angel's wings are dark,
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    hard to make out against the background,
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    which gives the work a sense of drama,
    tension, or foreboding of what is to come.
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    The angel feels strangely
    grounded and tangible,
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    consistent with
    Caravaggio's naturalistic style.
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    While not identical,
    there is a visual echo
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    between the positioning
    of Michelangelo's God,
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    and Caravaggio's angel.
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    Both figures lean towards
    the human counterpart
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    in a gesture of divine
    communication or intervention.
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    Additionally the drapery in both works
    flows dynamically,
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    adding to the sense
    of motion and divine energy.
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    The martyrdom is the last of the three.
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    According to tradition,
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    the saint was killed on the orders
    of the king of Ethiopia,
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    while celebrating mass at the altar.
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    Caravaggio chooses the moment
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    when the murderer has already
    stabbed Matthew once,
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    and is about to administer the fatal blow.
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    We can see splattered blood
    from that first wound.
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    It is the sort of violence Caravaggio
    himself was all too familiar with.
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    The artist is never really interested
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    in the physical environment
    in his paintings,
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    and the altar
    - so important in other versions -
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    is almost entirely obscured
    by the angel's cloud.
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    The angel, with a head
    of thick brown curls
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    and a muscular adolescent body,
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    is similar to that in "The Inspiration",
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    and almost certainly was the same model.
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    He seems to have been inspired
    by this painting by Titian.
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    The martyrs are in identical
    — but reversed - positions.
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    The assassin looms over the saint,
    with one hand gripping his arm,
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    and the other raised with a weapon.
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    The nearby companion
    recoils in panic and flees,
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    almost a mirror image.
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    And the angels reach out to the Saint
    with a palm leaf, the symbol of martyrdom.
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    Caravaggio had never painted
    such a large canvas,
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    nor one with so many figures,
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    and it seems to have caused him
    considerable difficulty.
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    X-rays reveal two separate attempts
    at the composition.
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    Originally it was
    a much more crowded painting,
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    with some architectural features,
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    and many more characters.
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    By taking away these elements
    and removing the architecture,
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    Caravaggio removes any distractions
    from the main story.
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    Matthew's Martyrdom.
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    Each figure in the painting
    — many in contemporary clothing —
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    is an individual,
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    the artist would have cast
    from the streets of Rome,
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    each with a unique expression
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    ranging from indifference
    to curiosity to fear.
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    The three men here, are in loin cloths,
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    so were waiting to be baptised by Matthew.
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    The Assassin himself is in a loin cloth,
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    suggesting he was pretending
    to be one of those waiting to be baptised.
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    If we look at this figure here,
    we see a self-portrait of Caravaggio,
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    a likeness we know
    from his other paintings.
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    And if you look carefully,
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    Caravaggio's bare buttocks tell us
    he is wearing a loin cloth,
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    suggesting he too
    was about to be baptised,
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    but is now running away.
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    A comment perhaps, that he,
    like the other people fleeing the scene,
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    would have lacked the courage
    to help St Matthew.
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    In the case of "The Martyrdom",
    the light source is coming from the left,
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    for "The Calling" it comes from the right
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    and for "The Inspiration", from above.
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    In other words, as if the light
    from the Chapel's real window
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    extends into the three paintings.
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    He uses light to guide us
    around the painting
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    and to pick out the most
    important elements of the subject,
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    in much the same way a spotlight
    picks out the action on a stage.
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    Our eyes are of course drawn
    to the central figure,
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    the Assassin, who is also
    the most brightly lit.
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    We follow his arm down to St Matthew,
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    who appears to be holding
    his hand up for protection,
  • 17:29 - 17:32
    but is in fact reaching for the angel
    (who only he can see),
  • 17:32 - 17:36
    who is in turn reaching down
    to him with the palm.
  • 17:36 - 17:38
    This is not a painting about fear,
  • 17:38 - 17:41
    but rather a moment of Joy or ecstasy
  • 17:41 - 17:46
    - a common way martyrdom
    was portrayed by Baroque artists -
  • 17:46 - 17:48
    as we shall see with Bernini.
  • 17:48 - 17:51
    Once again Caravaggio
    uses mirror images and balance
  • 17:51 - 17:52
    to create symmetry,
  • 17:52 - 17:56
    and help guide the viewer's eyes
    towards the key figures.
  • 17:56 - 18:00
    The Assassin and St Matthew
    are positioned symmetrically,
  • 18:00 - 18:02
    and if we flip St Matthew up
  • 18:02 - 18:05
    we can see it is a mirror image.
  • 18:05 - 18:07
    St Matthew reaches out to the angel
  • 18:07 - 18:09
    passing him the palm of martydom
  • 18:09 - 18:12
    with both their arms
    at a 90° angle to their bodies,
  • 18:12 - 18:15
    creating a vertical line straight
    through the painting.
  • 18:15 - 18:18
    As with "The Inspiration of St Matthew",
  • 18:18 - 18:21
    their body positions
    are almost identical:
  • 18:21 - 18:24
    Right arm reaching, left arm bent,
  • 18:24 - 18:28
    left leg outstretched,
    right leg bent backwards out of view.
  • 18:28 - 18:32
    The movement and energy
    in all three paintings is intense.
  • 18:32 - 18:36
    There is a real sense
    of dialogue and motion.
  • 18:36 - 18:40
    Figures are in mid action,
    capturing a specific moment
  • 18:40 - 18:42
    and emphasising the drama
  • 18:42 - 18:45
    that seems to be taking place
    right here, right now.
  • 18:45 - 18:49
    His characters lean, twist, grimace
  • 18:49 - 18:52
    and gesture, bringing
    biblical narratives to life
  • 18:52 - 18:54
    with unprecedented immediacy.
  • 18:54 - 18:56
    It is anachronistic, of course.
  • 18:56 - 19:01
    But there is a good reason
    to call Caravaggio's art "cinematic",
  • 19:01 - 19:04
    three centuries
    before cinema was invented.
  • 19:04 - 19:07
    His work had an immediate influence
  • 19:07 - 19:12
    on artists like Peter Paul Rubens,
    Artemisia Gentileschi, and Bernini,
  • 19:12 - 19:14
    but in the 20th century
  • 19:14 - 19:17
    his influence extended to the art of cinema
    and cinematography,
  • 19:17 - 19:22
    in the many films which were influenced
    by the painter's visual style and themes.
  • 19:24 - 19:28
    His paintings of St Matthew
    marked a turning point in his career,
  • 19:28 - 19:31
    and he became
    the most celebrated painter in Rome.
  • 19:32 - 19:35
    But his success in that city
    was short-lived.
  • 19:38 - 19:43
    On May 28th, 1606, Caravaggio
    became involved in a deadly duel
  • 19:43 - 19:46
    with a man named Ranuccio Tomassoni,
  • 19:46 - 19:50
    likely over a dispute related to gambling,
  • 19:50 - 19:52
    a lover, or personal honour.
  • 19:52 - 19:56
    The fight took place
    in the Campo Marzio District of Rome,
  • 19:56 - 19:59
    and Caravaggio fatally wounded Tomassoni.
  • 19:59 - 20:03
    In Rome at the time, murder was
    a capital offence, punishable by death.
  • 20:04 - 20:08
    A "bando capitali", or a death warrant,
    was issued,
  • 20:08 - 20:12
    meaning, anyone could legally
    kill Caravaggio and claim a reward.
  • 20:12 - 20:16
    By 1610, the artist had been living
    in exile for four years,
  • 20:16 - 20:19
    moving between Naples, Malta, and Sicily,
  • 20:19 - 20:22
    seeking protection
    from powerful patrons
  • 20:22 - 20:25
    who would overlook
    his criminal convictions,
  • 20:25 - 20:28
    as long as he continued
    to paint masterpieces for them.
  • 20:28 - 20:31
    His work from this period often reflected
  • 20:31 - 20:34
    themes of guilt,
    mortality, and redemption.
  • 20:34 - 20:37
    This image features him
    as the defeated Goliath,
  • 20:37 - 20:39
    and his former assistant as David.
  • 20:40 - 20:45
    Caravaggio died in Porto Ercole
    on July the 18th or 19th, 1610
  • 20:45 - 20:47
    at the age of 38.
  • 20:47 - 20:50
    The exact cause of death
    remains uncertain.
  • 20:50 - 20:55
    His untimely - but some
    might say unsurprising - death
  • 20:55 - 20:57
    brought a tragic end to his story,
  • 20:57 - 21:00
    but left behind
    a legacy of revolutionary art
  • 21:00 - 21:03
    that changed the course
    of Western painting.
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    In part two of great art cities: Rome,
  • 21:08 - 21:12
    I look at two more Baroque churches
    containing great masterpieces.
  • 21:13 - 21:18
    One is an immense optical illusion,
    painted onto a flat ceiling,
  • 21:18 - 21:20
    by a Jesuit brother, Andrea Pozzo.
  • 21:20 - 21:23
    And then he other shows the murder
    of a Spanish Carmelite nun,
  • 21:23 - 21:28
    created by another troubled
    and violent artist - Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
  • 21:36 - 21:39
    Transcript by Margarida Mariz (2025)
Title:
Great Art Cities: Rome - Caravaggio, Bernini and Pozzo
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
21:39

English subtitles

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