Sunday, December 1, 2019
The Holy Trinity Of Masaccio Essays - Masaccio,
  The Holy Trinity of Masaccio          The Holy Trinity by Masaccio was done approximately 1428. It is a  superb example of Masaccio's use of space and perspective. It consists of  two levels of unequal height. Christ is represented on the top half, in a  coffered, barrel-vaulted chapel. On one side of him is the Virgin Mary,  and on the other, St. John. Christ himself is supported by God the Father,  and the Dove of the Holy Spirit rests on Christ's halo. In front of the  pilasters that enframe the chapel kneel the donors (h usband and wife).  Underneath the altar (a masonry insert in the painted composition) is a  tomb. Inside the tomb is a skeleton, which may represent Adam. The  vanishing point is at the center of the masonry altar, because this is the  eye level of th e spectator, who looks up at the Trinity and down at the  tomb. The vanishing point, five feet above the floor level, pulls both  views together. By doing this, an illusion of an actual structure is  created. The interior volume of this 'structure' i s an ex tension of the  space that the person looking at the work is standing in. The adjustment  of the spectator to the pictured space is one of the first steps in the  development of illusionistic painting. Illusionistic painting fascinated  many artists of the Renaissance and Baroque periods.        The proportions in this painting are so numerically exact that one  can actually calculate the numerical dimensions of the chapel in the  background. The span of the painted vault is seven feet, and the depth is  nine feet. "Thus, he achieves not only successful illusion, but a  rational, metrical coherence that, by maintaining the mathematical  proportions of the surface design, is responsible for the unity and harmony  of this monumental composition." Two principal interests are summed up by  The Holy Trinity: Realism based on observation, and the application of  mathematics to pictorial organization.        All of the figures are fully clothed, except for that of Christ  himself. He is, however, wearing a robe around his waist. The figure is  "real"; it is a good example of a human body. The rest of the figures,  who are clothed, are wearing ro bes. The drapery contains heavy folds and  creases, which increases the effect of shadows. The human form in its  entirety is not seen under the drapery; only a vague representation of it  is seen. It is not at all like the 'wet-drapery' of Classica l antiquity.        Massacio places the forms symmetrically in the composition. Each  has its own weight and mass, unlike earlier Renaissance works. The fresco  is calm, and creates a sad mood. The mood is furthered by the darkness of  the work, and the heavy sh adows cast.        Grunewald's The Isenheim Altarpiece is an oil painting on wood,  completed in 1515. The altar is composed of a carved wooden shrine with  two pairs of movable panels, one directly in back of the other. The  outermost scene is the Crucifixion; on the inside there are two others. On  the two sides, two saints are represented (St. Sebastian on the left, and  St. Anthony on the right). Together, these saints established the theme of  disease and healing that is reinforced by the inner paintin gs. On the  bottom of the panel, when opened, it appears that Christ's legs were  amputated; possibly an allusion to ergotism, a disease treated in the  hospital where the altarpiece was kept.        An image of the terrible suffering of Christ is in the middle. The  suffering body hangs against the dark background, which falls all the way  to the earth. The flesh is discolored by decomposition and is studded with  the thorns of the lash. His blackening feet twist in agony, as do his arms.  His head is to one side, and his fingers appear as crooked spikes. The  shuddering tautness of Christ's nerves is expressed through the positions  of his fingers. Up to this point, no other artist has ever produced such  an image of pain. The sharp, angular shapes of anguish appear in the  figures of the swooning Virgin and St. John, and in the shrill delirium of  the Magdalene. On the other side, John the Baptist, a gaunt form, points a  finge r at the body of the dead Christ. Even though death and suffering  are dominant in the altarpiece, there are symbols of hope: The river  behind St. John, which represents baptism, and the wine-red sky which  symbolizes the blood of Christ. Through th ese sym bols, ahope of  salvation    
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