Showing posts with label Essays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essays. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Spirit of Saint Francis, Inspiring Words from Pope Francis




Ever since the new pope selected the papal name Francis, St. Francis of Assisi, who the pope honored by his choice, has been a hot topic.  That's a good thing.  St. Francis (b.1182-d.1226) personified love, compassion, peace and humility. 

There are quite a few self-absorbed people who do not consider those four traits qualities, but see them instead as weaknesses.  Pope Francis has made it one of his missions to dispel that cynicism whenever he can.

This book is made up of many short quotes from Pope Francis, all translations approved by the Vatican.  Each of the ten sections is preceded by a quote from St. Francis, well selected, and well pared with the pope's quotes. 






The aim of these short readings are to strengthen faith and to give hope for a better, more loving future to the Catholic faithful in the economically advanced countries, who are suffering from spiritual depression.
We need to implore his grace daily, asking him to open our cold hearts and shake up our lukewarm and superficial existence.
The ten sections, which can be delved into randomly, a reader choosing the section depending on where they need the most spiritual balm, are:
  1. We Are Infinitely Loved
  2. God Never Tires of Forgiving Us
  3. Entrust Yourself to God's Mercy
  4. Dive into Prayer
  5. Discover True Joy
  6. Choose Simplicity and Humility
  7. Do Not Forget the Poor!
  8. Preach the Gospel at All Times
  9. Be Instruments of Peace and Pardon
  10. Respect and Protect Creation





The pope is an enthusiastic speaker, who loves to encourage the faithful to live dignified and fulfilled lives.  His words are joyful, spontaneous, inspirational, positive, and uplifting.  They are often infused with humor and self-deprecating comments about his own fallibility.

Underlying the text is a call for lapsed persons of the Catholic faith to return to the sacraments of confession and communion, and to return to prayer and to acts of charity. 

There are pleas by the pope for the flock not to succumb to the banal, faithless life of secular societies, a life that can be short of morals and long on self-indulgence, which kills the good in mankind.
For God's love burns away our selfishness, our prejudices, our interior and exterior divisions.  The love of God even burns away our sins.





I enjoyed most the more concrete quotes of ministry to the faithful and fallen Catholics alike.
Love of God in Jesus always opens us to hope, to that horizon of hope, to the final horizon of our pilgrimage. 
I enjoyed least the very un-Catholic call for evangelizing.  I've always admired my Catholic faith for being one of example, of everyday Catholics trying to be living examples of their faith's tenants.  The evangelizing is to be done by the priest on Sundays at mass. 

Pope Francis has clearly embraced the widespread evangelical missions that have encroached on the Catholic faithful in many parts of the world.  If you can't beat them, join them?  Or perhaps it is the Jesuit in him speaking?

Another oddity was the discarding of the capital letter for the pronoun referring to God, which I can only guess has fallen by the wayside in an effort to make the text more accessible to a wider audience.






It is clear that the overwhelming goal of the book is to bring comfort from pain, and to make this a better world full of better people.  That is a wonderful goal.  The book is intended to be used as a book of prayer-meditation.
Prayer is the breath of faith...prayer is the dialogue of the soul with God.
The quotes have been chosen to encourage us to live more like St. Francis in spirit.  That is also a wonderful thing, and a difficult thing to do in a world full of cynicism and materialism. 






I recently heard a British journalist say something to effect of:
In our society that sees goodness as stupidity, to be a good person is something very few understandably attempt.
All I could think when I heard that was:
I don't ever want to live in Britain, a society that sees goodness as stupidity!  Can it be true?  Please, Lord, let it not be so!
Somehow, I think this book would be wasted on such a society. 

But if you are someone who strives to be good, then this book might help heal the wounds suffered by evil, and encourage you not to abandon your honorable values.
...he is not abstract but has a name:  God is Love.    




From the book's description:
Published in cooperation with the Vatican, this original collection brings the life and legacy of Saint Francis of Assisi to life through the pope's uplifting and challenging words.

By taking the name of one of the most venerated figures in Christendom, Pope Francis set a high bar for his papacy.  Pope Francis often speaks and writes about Franciscan ideals such as simplicity, humility, forgiveness, joy, compassion, peacemaking, and care for creation.

His inspirational homilies, addresses, and writings on these and other Franciscan themes are collected in this book for the first time, giving you a simple way to renew your faith.

Here is a direct link to the book at Amazon.com:




If you would prefer to go straight to the source, so to speak, here are some books with St. Francis's writings and prayers.






This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.


Tuesday, March 17, 2015

The Italians by John Hooper





If you are fascinated with modern Italy and modern Italians, you might enjoy this book.  If you are more interested in the achievements of past Italians in the fields of art, architecture, literature and music, this is not the book for you.  If you are a person of faith, especially of the Catholic faith, you may be offended by the author's anti-Catholic and anti-faith bias.

The author is a journalist, so the anecdotes and examples he uses to elucidate the modern Italian's generalized character often come from recent events, interviews, or recent books by others.  He even quotes from the classic book with the same title, The Italians by Luigi Barzini.  To be honest, I found it a bit odd to use the same title as Barzini's classic...but to each his own.





The book begins by explaining Italy's geography, and uses it as a reason for the diversity of language and sub-cultures in Italy.  The next section tries to cover Italy's 3000 year history, but as always when one tries to summarize Italian history, it passes in a blur.  The sections after that address a single subject but there is much overlapping, and much jumping around in time.

Some sections will likely confuse readers, such as the one on politics, since Italian politics is a confusing mess, with hundreds of political parties each called by nothing more than their initials, which the author uses with ease, being an experience journalist.  As the author admits, in Italy:
...all sorts of things are immensely complicated.





There is an inherent risk with books that attempt to describe a national character of a people:  the generalizations do not fit everyone, and can be insulting to a huge swath of a country's population.  The author attempts to address this, but I'm not sure he succeeds in that.

There is also a risk when focusing on one Mediterranean country to ignore the fact that most all Mediterranean countries share similar traits and problems.  Many authors ascribe Mediterranean traits to Italians as if they were unique.  That is not the case.  The reasons for this are partly historical and partly economic.  But the truth is that Italians share many traits with Greeks, Spaniards, the French, Moroccans, Algerians... 






The tone of the book is chatty, with many Italian words peppering the text.  If you are at all familiar with Italian society, you will not be surprised with the author's description of the low trust society centered around the family with women generally treated as second-class citizens. 

I imagine the book would be most interesting to those who wish to live in Italy for some time, either for work or for pleasure.  It makes a wonderful get-up-to-speed-on-recent-events sort of read.  I received it as a review-copy.

I enjoyed the parts that discussed the artistic works of artists like Pirandello, Collodi, Verdi, and the elements of Commedia dell'Arte and Opera and how they related to a generalized Italian character.  I did not enjoy the attempts at psychological explanations for Italian traits.  Nor did I enjoy the anti-Papist bigotry and anti-faith bias of the author.  But that is just me...





From the book's description:
A vivid and surprising portrait of the Italian people from an admired foreign correspondent

How can a nation that spawned the Renaissance have produced the Mafia?  How could people concerned with bella figura (keeping up appearances) have elected Silvio Berlusconi as their leader not once, but three times?  Sublime and maddening, fascinating yet baffling, Italy is a country of seemingly unsolvable riddles.

John Hooper’s entertaining and perceptive new book is the ideal companion for anyone seeking to understand contemporary Italy and the unique character of the Italians. Digging deep into their history, culture, and religion, Hooper offers keys to understanding everything from their bewildering politics to their love of life and beauty.

Looking at the facts that lie behind the stereotypes, he sheds new light on many aspects of Italian life:  football and Freemasonry, sex, symbolism, and the reason why Italian has twelve words for a coat hanger, yet none for a hangover.

Even readers who think they know Italy well will be surprised, challenged, and delighted by The Italians

Here is a 2 minute into to the book by the author himself:




Here is a direct link to the book at Amazon.com:








Please visit the author's website.





This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.




Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Italian Venice: A History by R. J. B. Bosworth





Why do people often come to hate the people who provide them with a living?  Doctors abhorring and ridiculing their patients; lawyers mocking their clients; shopkeepers disrespecting their shoppers; public servants thwarting the public? 

It is resentment, most likely, from the knowledge that they would not make a living without those people.  That resentment causes them to take offense when none is given, and to lash out with vitriol when none is warranted, to treat people with great disrespect and contempt.

This is what I think of when I recall my last visit to Venice, Italy.  Mass tourism gives the people of Venice a living that they would not otherwise have in their impractical, archaic city.  The tourism receipts and taxes pay for the upkeep of the ancient structures and infrastructures, prolonging the life of a dying city. 

And yet many Venetians treat the city's eager, joyous visitors with a general contempt.  In most cases the contempt is restrained, but I witnessed, and suffered, cases of lack of restraint, cases of face to face hostility and insult that was in no way provoked.





All of the above is a, perhaps inappropriate, prelude to my response to the book, Italian Venice:  A History, a history of the watery city that covers the short "Italian" era of Venice's long history:  
  • from 1797 to the present-day, 
  • including the belle époque period, 
  • World Wars I and II, and Fascism in between, 
  • post war Venice and the Italian miracle, 
  • and the modern mass tourism  era.    

Reading this book, Italian Venice:  A History, you'll get a glimpse of the history that Venice has experienced in the past 200+ years.  That was why I requested a review-copy.

The author asserts that after Italian unification, which Venice joined in 1866, Venice instituted a campaign to keep the city as it was in the past, during their glorious Republic, for posterity and for tourism.  Actually, Venice had instituted the policy long before that, avidly and actively promoting its republican decadence to tourists for centuries. 

Come to Venice, sin with our prostitutes behind the protection of a mask.   
What happens in Venice, stays in Venice!



Since trade routes west opened up alternate trade routes to the east, Venice had declined into an impoverished, crumbling version of its former glorious self.  Not just the women and boys prostituted themselves, but the city itself.  There is nothing new under Venice's sun, except the attitude that many of the citizens of the city have that they are put upon by the very people who give them a living.

The book reads too often like a "review of all books ever written about Venice".  Quotes fill the text, dropping names at such speed that I expected the Bibliography/Notes section of the book to be equal in length to the book itself!  In fact, the end matter of the book takes up 85 pages, with the book's text filling roughly 250 pages.   

We are also treated to a Who's-Who of anyone of any import who ever lived in Venice during the history covered, for even short periods.  The author does touch on the contempt for modern tourism, but only lightly.  His main thesis is that Venice has always been an international tourist-filled city, and should remain an international tourist-filled city.  




The author attempts to distance his view from many pompous, elitist views that have found their way into publication over the centuries.  His historical sketches of Venice's influential men, the most notable Volpi and Roncalli and Cini, are interesting, and often accompanied by photographs of their monuments in Venice.

Sorry, but back to my griping...I grew up in a city that earned much of its revenue from tourism, in the days before mass tourism had a name.  Instead of contempt, we enjoyed the tourists, and helped them whenever we could to appreciate and experience the history, and present, of our special city. 

We understood what they brought to us economically, but we also appreciated the refreshed vision they gifted to us.  They allowed us to see our beautiful, unique city through new eyes, to appreciate the beauty anew, to relish the unique history again.  Tourists brought rebirth to our own love-affair with our town.

Oh, that Venetians could be so sophisticated!  Or at least that they could be as educated as New Yorkers became in the 1980s in an effort to save their tourist industry, learning to be civil and kind and helpful to the hoards who invaded the skyscraper island. 





Quite a few native Venetians could use an education in civility.  While their city is unique in the world, their experiences with mass tourism are anything but unique.  Their sense of martyrdom, and their sense of an entitlement to resentment and hostility, and to a make-a-quick-buck attitude, is a petty response to something that hundreds of other cities face every year with much more grace.

The idea of a Venice without Venetians horrifies some people, but after my last visit to the city, I would actually only consider returning to Venice when all the Venetians are gone, and well-trained attendants have taken their place, so that no one has to suffer the abuse that I suffered, and that I witnessed thrown at people who had spent a small fortune to make a trip-of-a-lifetime. 

Sorry, but that is how I feel, and how I suspect more that a few other Venetian tourists feel.  If your trip to Venice was without insult, then count yourself lucky, or count yourself ignorant of the what the Venetians were saying to you in their dialect, thinking you couldn't understand them.  I understood them, and I was horrified by what I heard.  The denial of reality, the sense of entitlement, the rudeness, the insults, the nastiness, the misogyny, the neglect of animals, the money-grubbing...

My visits to Venice in future will be via books like Italian Venice: A History.




From the book's description:
In this elegant book Richard Bosworth explores Venice—not the glorious Venice of the Venetian Republic, but from the fall of the Republic in 1797 and the Risorgimento up through the present day.

Bosworth looks at the glamour and squalor of the belle époque and the dark underbelly of modernization, the two world wars, and the far-reaching oppressions of the fascist regime, through to the “Disneylandification” of Venice and the tourist boom, the worldwide attention of the biennale and film festival, and current threats of subsidence and flooding posed by global warming.

He draws out major themes—the increasingly anachronistic but deeply embedded Catholic Church, the two faces of modernization, consumerism versus culture.

Bosworth interrogates not just Venice’s history but its meanings, and how the city’s past has been co-opted to suit present and sometimes ulterior aims. Venice, he shows, is a city where its histories as well as its waters ripple on the surface.


Italian Venice:  A History is published by Yale University Press.  They maintain a fascinating blog.

By publishing serious works that contribute to a global understanding of human affairs, Yale University Press aids in the discovery and dissemination of light and truth, lux et veritas, which is a central purpose of Yale University. The publications of the Press are books and other materials that further scholarly investigation, advance interdisciplinary inquiry, stimulate public debate, educate both within and outside the classroom, and enhance cultural life. In its commitment to increasing the range and vigor of intellectual pursuits within the university and elsewhere, Yale University Press continually extends its horizons to embody university publishing at its best.




Here is a direct link to the book at Amazon.com, plus links to the author's books about Italy's Fascist history:






This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.

Thursday, September 4, 2014

The New Deal in Old Rome by H. J. Haskell




The subtitle of this book is How Government in the Ancient World Tried to Deal with Modern Problems.  Actually, "Modern Problems" would have been better as "Timeless Problems", since the book demonstrates that poverty, unemployment, wealth concentration into too few hands, and controversial programs for wealth redistribution are, indeed, timeless and inevitable problems of commercial societies.

This slim volume (136 pages) was written when The New Deal in the United States was implemented.  For those who do not know about The New Deal, implemented under President Franklin Roosevelt, a minimal social net was created, and greater regulation of financial institutions was instituted to recover from the Greta Depression and to prevent another economic crisis from happening.  Another part of The New Deal was a price protection program linked with subsidies to protect farmers from price shocks.



President Franklin Roosevelt Signs the Social Security Bill, part of the New Deal for Americans


A fascination developed among the well-educated about "instances of government intervention in the ancient world" and this book was written to address that fascination.  The author was a journalist and editor with the Kansas City Star newspaper, and he was an amateur historian with a broad classical education.  He was also a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for editorials he wrote for the paper. 

The author provides maps that show the expansion of Rome over 1000 years from city-state to Empire, from roughly 800 B.C. to 200 A.D.  These are the chapter headings:
  1. Beginning an Adventure
  2. When Rome Went Modern
  3. A Tour of Orientation
  4. Early new Deal Experiments
  5. The Get Rich Quick Era
  6. The Farm Problem Emerges
  7. Big Business in Politics
  8. The Republic Couldn't Stan Prosperity
  9. Drift to Dictatorship
  10. Boom and Depression
  11. Prelude to Crisis
  12. Warning Signals




Depending on one's views on The New Deal and on social nets, one will take the author's research and twist it one way, or twist it another way.  The author himself seems to be of the "twist it positively" persuasion.
The failure of the roman system to furnish decent minimal standards for the mass of people was a fundamental cause of instability, both political and economic.
He is also in favor of taxes to support the social net, meaning relatively high taxes to support the social net.  But that is the rub.  He admits that the tax base of ancient Rome became debased by plagues and by the newly transplanted tribesmens' reluctance to pay their taxes, so the Empire could no longer support the social systems and the vast administration that went with it and that went with the tax collection. 
 


Workmen on the Giant Turbine in the Powerhouse of the Bonneville Dam, Ca. 1937, part of the infrastructure programs that were part of The New Deal


As anyone who studies Roman history knows, you can always find something to support any argument you choose to make about the Romans.  Mussolini used Roman history to justify his Empire building, massacres of natives in Africa, the establishment of a police state in Italy, the withdrawal of rights from women and minorities in Italy, the repression of his detractors, vast governmental subsidies, and monumental building programs.

The author visited Rome during this Fascist era, and he marveled in Mussolini's archeological program in Rome, which dressed up the newly exposed Roman ruins in the center of Rome, and built special museums to exhibit the finds and displays to convey ancient Rome's (ancient Italians') greatness, all under the guise of celebrating the 1000 year anniversary of the birth of the first roman Emperor, Augustus (Octavian), who Mussolini felt he was emulating.



Italic Forum (Originally Mussolini Forum), 1928 - 1938, 20th Century, one of Mussolini's public works projects emulating Augustus


Why was the Roman Empire so wealthy and successful?  They created a large free-trade area that covered all the areas Rome conquered.  They guaranteed the freedom of movement around the Empire, enforced strict property laws, protected trade routes, built and maintained necessary infrastructure, established fast communication routes and systems, developed a sophisticated and stable financial system, established the rule of law backed up by a strong civil service, and maintained strong government spending programs.

What were some of the problems with the Roman Empire?  First and foremost is the trade in human beings, slavery, which debased people's morality as well as undercutting employment for the low skilled.  Other problems included corruption and racketeering, a large and underused labor class, a very small middle class made up of traders who serviced mainly the upper class, and a very small upper class who locked up the ownership of much land and thus most of the wealth of the land-based economy.


Striking Employees of NYC Woolworth's Demand a 40 Hour Work Week, 1937, worker protection laws were part of The New Deal


If you wish to begin a study of Roman history, I would recommend this little book!  The author provides a wonderful summary of Roman society and history.  Here is his excellent timeline:
  • 1000 B.C. Shepherds' settlement on the Tiber
  • 753 B.C. Traditional date of the founding of Rome
  • 509 B.C. Republic established with overthrow of monarchy
  • 509-265 B.C. Unification of Italy
  • 264-133 B.C. Period of rapid territorial expansion
  • 133-31 B.C. Revolutionary era, culminating in civil war, ending in battle of Actium and disappearance of the Republic
  • 31 B.C. - 235 A.D. Empire established, with Roman peace; Golden Age
  • 235-284 Military anarchy
  • 284-476 Totalitarian state and end of Western Empire



Clearly The New Deal did not tackle sexual inequality


The timeline is followed by a so-called "Tour of Orientation", which is a brief summary of Roman history, hitting all the right points.
Roughly, the history of Rome which we are to survey covers a period of a thousand years, divided sharply in the middle shortly before the birth of Christ.  For the first five hundred years the city-state thought of itself as a republic governed by a council of elder Statesmen, the Senate, in conjunction with assemblies of all citizens and with elective magistrates.  For the last five hundred the government hardened into an autocracy, "despotism tempered by assassination".  The Republic finally disappeared shortly after the murder of Julius Caesar; the Empire began with the accession of Augustus.




The New Deal's WPA goal was to find/create quality jobs for people


Political economics teaches us that the natural give and take of a capitalist system leads for the accumulation of great wealth in few hands.  Laws and law-enforcement are necessary to prevent the establishment of monopolies and consortia who seek to rig markets.  The redistribution of wealth through taxes and subsidies are a necessary element in capitalism if it is to be made a viable system to last over time. 

However, as the author points out, great wealth and luxury in a society can bring about a culture of avarice and self-indulgence, which can destroy necessary characteristics such as self-discipline, reasonableness, and a readiness to compromise.  When the wealthy refuse to submit to the rule of law which limits their power and accumulation of wealth, and they refuse to pay the taxes required to maintain a healthy capitalistic economy, the system suffers shocks such as booms and busts.  Wise moderation goes out the window.

United States' First Foreign Trade Zone in 1937 to stimulate trade and the economy


So what sort of programs did Ancient Rome use to keep the economy of the Empire healthy?  These will sound very familiar to anyone who keeps up with modern economics.
  • Monetary manipulation
  • Employment rules to widen the labour base
  • Low interest rates to provide money for investment (when the rates were kept too low for too long, a boom grew that would always end in a bust)
  • Protection from usury rates of interest
  • New markets were opened up for trade (but they sometimes had a negative effect on employment and incomes)
  • Agricultural planning support and crop support with price stabilization schemes, and cheap, subsidized farm loans
  • Trust busting programs
  • Liberal bankruptcy laws
  • Large infrastructure projects and the maintenance afterward
  • Programs to spread the ownership of land
  • Relief programs for the needy in the rough and tumble economy, including food gifts and money gifts and unemployment payments
  • Debt relief programs and debt holidays
  • Government backed property loans to support property ownership and property prices
  • Child allowances to encourage reproduction and the healthy upbringing of children
  • Price, wage and capital controls

WPA poster highlighting their projects to support farmers, like irrigation and dams, and electricity generation and distribution to better the life of rural families


The author also discusses what the Romans should have done, but didn't do, to stabilize their economic system and avoid collapse.
  • Curtail the autocratic society which had a stifling effect upon the human spirit
  • Encourage industry and innovation to grow the economy and diversify it
  • End slavery and promote the use of labor saving devices to improve labor conditions
  • Create a widespread and inclusive educational system to develop labor potential
  • Smooth out the sharp social divisions which created tension in society and led to revolts
  • Promote decent jobs with living wages, and public participation in governance
  • Check the short-sighted self-interests of the super-rich who blocked social progress in an attempt to entrench their own power and wealth
This is a fascinating little book that I highly recommend so that the reader can understand the background and substance of discussions that fill today's economic news.  There is nothing new under the sun, so why not learn from what has come before us?  It might help us to avoid those mistakes that can prove so costly.



The Roman aristocrats were the only ones who lived decent lives


This book was originally published in 1939, and updated in 1947, by Alfred A. Knopf.  It has been reissued by the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
The Mises Institute is the world’s largest, oldest, and most influential educational institution devoted to promoting Austrian economics, freedom, and peace in the tradition of classical liberalism.
Austrian economics is a method of economic analysis, and is non-ideological. Nonetheless, the Austrian School has long been associated with libertarian and classical-liberal thought—promoting private property and freedom, while opposing war and aggression of all kinds.



(opens in your browser, and you can then save it to your computer)






First Food Stamp Program Operated from May 16 1939 Through Spring of 1943, to stop starvation in The United States of America


From the book's description:
What a fantastic way to learn ancient history: via the parallels with modern times.
H.J. Haskell was a journalist with a huge background in ancient history, and here he does what everyone has wanted done. He details the amazing catalog of government interventions in old Rome that eventually brought the empire down. He shows the spending, the inflating, the attempt to fix prices and raise wages, the infrastructure boondoggles, the gross displays of public entertainment, the welfare scams, and much more.
At every step he draws a parallel with modern times. Modern governments also destroy the money to fund the state, extend vast military empires that are unmanageable, try to control the market order, and attempt to rig political decision making in order to buy off the population.
The comparisons between then and now generate ominous lessons for our times.
This book was a smash hit when it first came out in 1939, and yet it went out of print, and hasn't been in print in half a century.
The writing is clear, the research impeccable, and it teaches modern and ancient history in one entertaining yet scholarly package.
What a triumph of research and writing this book is!



Bread Line Beside the Brooklyn Bridge Approach. New York City Ca, 1930-35


Here is a direct link to another reprint of the book that is available at Amazon.com:





This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors & Architects by Giorgio Vasari




The ten volumes of this book were written in roughly the year 1568, during the Italian Renaissance, by an Italian artist about Italian artists.  The books contain biographies and descriptions of the artists' major works, ordered by style, which is not exactly chronological.  The biographies are written in a gossipy, first-hand style, that revels in namedropping, making the books a Who's Who of the Italian Renaissance (the Name Indices at the back of each book are an amazing collection of Renaissance artists!).
...writing down the lives, the works, the manners, and the circumstances of all those who, finding the arts already dead, first revived them, then step by step nourished and adorned them, and finally brought them to that height of beauty and majesty whereon they stand at the present day.



 An original frontispiece to the first two-volume edition


Look closely at the beginning of the books and you will see the Papal permission (Pius V) for publication that was required for all books a the time, and were issued by the Offiicii sanctissimae Inquisitionis Florentinae, the same office of the inquisition who refused publication rights to Galileo's writings and had him jailed.

The books are all AVAILABLE FOR FREE download as e-books, in various formats, from Project Gutenberg, the grand-daddy of free e-book sites on the Internet.  The edition at Project Gutenberg is the 1912-1914 edition published by MacMillan and Co. Ltd. Together with The Medici Society, and it is a translation from the Tuscan to English by Gaston Du C. De Vere.  Hundreds of photographs accompany the text.



Project Gutenberg was the first group to put public domain texts online for free download.  Others have taken their free texts and packaged them as to-purchase books.  Don't be fooled!  They are all free via Project Gutenberg in various e-book formats, and many are available for free via Amazon.com as Kindle e-books.



Vasari's moody portrait of Lorenzo de' Medici painted long after the man had died, but which is said to be truer to life than those painted during the man's life


Giorgio Vasari was an artist, and in the Florentine tradition, also an architect, but he modestly calls himself "a painter of Arezzo".  He lived from 1511 to 1574.  Most of his commissions were for the Ducal family of Florence, the de' Medici, to whom he dedicates the biographies.  Reading the biographies, you will notice that most commissions for art and buildings came from the Catholic Church, royal families, and wealthy aristocrats.

Most tourists who have visited Florence will recognize Vasari's name as linked to the corridor that connects the old government buildings in the center of Florence, to the Pitti Palace, the last de' Medici palace on the opposite side of the Arno River.  The corridor, designed by Vasari, runs above the shops on Florence's famous Ponte Vecchio.  Actually, the corridor and bridge are the backdrop to this blog.




This view of the Ponte Vecchio gives the best view of Vasari's corridor above the shops.  Vasari describes its construction in Book 10.


Leonardo

The sections that will most interest the casual reader are those about the two most famous artists of the Italian Renaissance:  Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangnolo (that is the Florentine spelling and how the man spelled his own name) Buonarotti.

The biography of Leonardo da Vinci is in Book 4, and it is a very long section, praising the artist as a man and as a scientist and an artist.
"...in supernatural fashion, beauty, grace, and talent are united beyond measure in one single person."

"...to whatever difficulties he turned his mind, he solved them with ease."



A self-portrait of Leonardo da Vinci, who was known in his lifetime for his extreme beauty


Michelangelo

The biography of Michelangelo is in Book 9, and it is wonderfully gossipy, full of first-hand accounts of the man, who was a friend of Vasari's, and peppered with quotes from private letters of Michelangelo's.  What comes across strongly is the reverence that the de' Medici showed Michelangelo, a longtime friend of the family, and the artist they trusted to make the family tomb in the Church of San Lorenzo in Florence.



A portrait of Michelangelo, who hated having his portrait made, since he was known during his lifetime for his very unattractive looks


Vasari, the perfect artist toward his patron, ends the books with:
"I shall never be weary of confessing the obligation that I feel towards that lord [ed. Cosimo de' Medici] for so many marks of affection."




A portrait of the first Duke of Tuscany, Cosimo de' Medici, in his full battle armor, painted by the official de' Medici portrait artist, Bronzino, who is described in Book 10.



Book 1
From Cimabue to Agnolo Gaddi, roughly 1240-1387
Includes Giotto and Pisano


Book 2
From Berna to Michelozzi, roughly 1369-1432
Includes Aretino, Della robbia, Masaccio and Brunelleschi


Book 3
From Filarete to Mantegna, roughly 1431-1517
Includes Piero della Francesca, Lippi, Gozzoli, Ghirlandajo, Pollaiuolo, Botticelli, and Verrocchio


Book 4
From Filippino to Puligo, roughly 1511-1527
Includes Filippino, Perugino, da Vinci and Fra Bartolomeo


Book 5
From Andrea da Fiesole to Lorenzo Lotto, roughly 1522-1548
Includes Raffaello, Andrea del Sarto and Sansovino


Book 6
From Fra Giocondo to Niccolo Soggi, roughly 1524-1536
Includes San Gallo, del Piombo and Vasari


Book 7
From Tibolo to Il Sodoma, roughly 1500-1554
Includes Bandinelli and Pontormo


Book 8
From Bastiano to Taddeo Zucchero, roughly 1534-1542
Includes Salviati and Rustici


Book 9
From Michelangelo to the Flemings, roughly 1474-1564
Includes Michelangelo (Michelagnolo) and Sansovino


Book 10
From Bronzino to Vasari
Includes the descriptions of Bronzino's portraits of the Ducal family, and of the wedding festival for Francesco, Duke Cosimo de' Medici's eldest son and heir, and projects Vasari undertook for the royal family.






Would you like a private tour of Vasari's corridor?  Here is one, that includes at the end a bit of the Boboli Gardens and some of Michelangelo's designs at the Church of San Lorenzo.


This review is by Candida Martinelli, of Candida Martinelli's Italophile Site, and the author of the cozy-murder-mystery novel AN EXTRA VIRGIN PRESSING MURDER, and the young-adult/adult mystery novel series THE VIOLET STRANGE MYSTERIES the first book of which is VIOLET'S PROBLEM.