Caravaggio's Calling of St. Matthew
Caravaggio's The Calling of St. Matthew dates from 1599-1600, in an extremely late phase of the Italian Renaissance. With the glories of Raphael and Michelangelo already belonging to a generation that had passed on, Caravaggio's style emerged out of the final trend of the Italian Renaissance in the sixteenth century, generally known (often derogatorily) as Mannerism. Mannerist art tends to emphasize the artifice of the painting itself, whether through trompe l'oeil or "fool the eye" style visual trickery or distortion of form in human figure in deliberately anti-classical ways in order to emphasize visual expressiveness and novelty. Caravaggio stands as a transitional figure between the Mannerist phase of the Renaissance, and the post-Renaissance movement of the Baroque: to a certain degree, he may be regarded as a late Renaissance school of painting unto himself. We may note, though, that despite Caravaggio's novelty of form, his handling of content in The Calling of Saint Matthew fulfills the standard goals of Renaissance art. Through a close examination of the painting, we may see how Caravaggio illustrates for the viewer a specific Biblical passage, but also follows the specific rules that had been established by the Catholic Church for what was appropriate for depiction in religious art at the turn of the seventeenth century.
It must be noted at the outset that Caravaggio himself -- whose life has been luridly depicted in biographies as one of homosexuality, espionage, and murder -- might seem an unlikely candidate for a Christian devotional painter. But The Calling of Saint Matthew was not only a commission from the Catholic Church, it was Caravaggio's first major commission: one may imagine, therefore, that the young painter would be on his guard to execute his first major job with special care. It is important however to situate Caravaggio's Christian message within its historical context. In 1599-1600, when Caravaggio worked on the canvas, the Reformation and its associated...
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