{"id":147262,"date":"2024-01-16T15:45:00","date_gmt":"2024-01-16T20:45:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/2024\/01\/roman-alchemy\/"},"modified":"2024-04-09T17:42:36","modified_gmt":"2024-04-09T21:42:36","slug":"roman-alchemy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/2024\/01\/roman-alchemy\/","title":{"rendered":"Roman alchemy"},"content":{"rendered":"

Away from the center of Rome and across the Tiber River is the Villa Farnesina, a jewel box of Renaissance art hidden away in the brash neighborhood of Trastevere.<\/p>\n

Named for the family who acquired it in the seventeenth century, the property was originally the home of the fabulously wealthy Sienese banker and mine owner Agostino Chigi (1466\u20131520), who commissioned Baldassare Peruzzi to design a base for his Rome operations that would be half city apartment, half country villa.<\/p>\n

Chigi was uninterested in just buying panel paintings: he wanted the building\u2019s interior to be the artwork itself. Its walls are decorated with several of the most celebrated works of Renaissance fresco, including Raphael\u2019s Galatea <\/i>(1512) and his Marriage of Cupid and Psyche<\/i> cycle (1517), as well as Sodoma\u2019s Wedding of Alexander and Roxane <\/i>(ca.<\/i> 1516), Sebastian del Piombo\u2019s Polyphemus <\/i>(ca.<\/i> 1512), and Peruzzi\u2019s ceiling representations of Chigi\u2019s horoscope, including a picture of Medusa and her stoned victims, often read as a symbol of the magic powers of the artist.<\/p>\n

Turning off one of Trastevere\u2019s cobblestone streets, visitors enter the walled-in campus through a gigantic iron gate. A pebble-covered driveway leads to horse stables designed by Raphael on the one side and gardens that hosted many of Chigi\u2019s parties on the other.<\/p>\n

Empty now, the grounds were once covered by statues from antiquity, which were being eagerly dragged out of the rubble beneath the city. The late fifteenth century saw the rebirth of the old Rome, delivered by archeological hunters hired by Pope Julius II, whose hoard of findings now makes up the Vatican Rooms. Wealthy patrons like Chigi bought up the rest. But, not satisfied with merely owning the past, they also provided lodgings on their estates for painters like Raphael to apply Christian genius to their nostalgic pagan fantasies.<\/p>\n

After presenting a ticket to the doorman, the visitor walks through a glass fa\u00e7ade directly into the Loggia, <\/i>which houses Raphael\u2019s vibrant Cupid and Psyche<\/i>, what the historian Jacob Burckhardt referred to as the \u201chighest possible achievement,\u201d the \u201csummit\u201d of the idealized nude. Two massive ceiling frescoes loom above: the council of the Olympian gods and the eponymous pair\u2019s wedding feast. Here are the Greek deities, radiant, painted by the best; here is the Renaissance\u2019s perfect physique, perfect health, perfect taste. The work, for many, serves as a permanent definition of \u201cgood art\u201d: impossible richness packed into strict and elegant form, the tightening of a lifeforce to its maximum performance. It is sheer Reinheit<\/i>\u2014purity.<\/p>\n

But for Burckhardt, Raphael was working with a disadvantage. The master only designed the work: it was carried out by his students Giulio Romano and Francesco Penni, who \u201crendered the ideas of the master in a conventional and even coarse style.\u201d We can improve it by mentally imposing the \u201cnaturalistic\u201d style of Galatea <\/i>onto it, Burckhardt reckons. Additionally, there is the problem of the pendentives\u2014the series of outgrowths and concavities crowning the ceiling. Burckhardt thought these were spatially \u201cill-adapted\u201d for a narrative fresco featuring several figures. It is therefore all the more impressive that Raphael \u201cbrought forth therefrom opportunities of special beauty.\u201d<\/p>\n

The bordering frescoes mainly depict scenes from Apuleius\u2019s second-century A.D. Neoplatonic satire The Golden Ass<\/i>. Apuleius used the Cupid and Psyche myth as a centralizing force, gathering up all the other chapters of the story into its gravitational orbit. In his telling, the kidnapped Psyche is forced to quell Venus\u2019s wrath by fulfilling quests around the universe, including a descent to the underworld for an elixir of Proserpina\u2019s beauty, and Cupid must agree to make available his love-striking services to Zeus indefinitely before the lovers can be reunited\u2014Raphael and his students brought the entire story marvelously to life. Interspersing these scenes are cherubim stealing Zeus\u2019s thunderbolts, Poseidon\u2019s trident, and the like, and each is bordered with flora and fruit painted by Giovanni da Udine, bursting forth as from superrich soil. When I visited there was an interactive touchscreen that analyzed each plant species, revealing that they can be sourced not only to Europe but also to Asia and the Americas.<\/p>\n

Goethe said that of all the world\u2019s galleries, the Farnesina was the most beautiful. The whole palace is a shrine to Venus, Cupid\u2019s mother, calling on the future to overcome the fear of eros and embrace it. Everything is about fecundity, from the beautiful Galatea rising from the amniotic sea, to the wedding of Alexander and Roxane, to Peruzzi\u2019s astrological work.<\/p>\n

One recent account of the Farnesina, possibly the most exhaustive ever to be written in English, is James Grantham Turner\u2019s The Villa Farnesina: Palace of Venus in Renaissance Rome <\/i>(2022). He reconstructs the villa of Chigi\u2019s time: there was an underground pool called the \u201cCave of the Nymphs\u201d with a grotto on the Tiber; a tower above what is now the highest floor with a panoramic view of the city; and a system of steam baths and fireplaces throughout.<\/p>\n

Turner takes eros, understood as sensual pleasure and desire, to be the villa\u2019s skeleton key. \u201cThe power of Eros,\u201d writes Turner, \u201chas been the mastermistress theme of this entire book.\u201d He concludes his work with the words amor surrexit omnia<\/i>. Love conquers all. The Farnesina is indeed highly sensual, and has thus been reduced by many critics to a temple of hedonism. But this appraisal misses something vital: Chigi, even if he was driven by lust for gold, had the wisdom to spend his gold on beauty that cannot be consumed.<\/p>\n

The marriage of Psyche (meaning <\/i>\u201csoul\u201d <\/i>in Greek) to Cupid (Cupido <\/i>in Latin, meaning \u201cpassionate love;\u201d in Greek, Eros<\/i>) operates on both the fleshly and the ideal. Telling the story of two gods on their lustful pursuit, Apuleius was also teaching the dialectic journey of the soul on its way to comprehend and unify itself with its destination, love.<\/p>\n

A similar love was practiced by titans of industry in better eras: the love of man, phil-anthropos<\/i>, not as eros<\/i> but as philia<\/i>, friendly affection, and not restricted to socioeconomic alleviation. Man\u2019s capacity for the ideal needs satiation and can be given it in the form of great aesthetic beauty. This is one reward of the \u201cgift-giving virtue\u201d that is the Herrsucht<\/i>, lust to rule, possessed by the best.<\/p>\n

And so the figure of Chigi the patron keeps returning to mind: none of this art would be possible without his alum mines in Tolfa\u2014an alchemy of coal to diamond. One placard informed me that Chigi was influenced by Giovanni Pontano, a humanist advisor to the king of Naples, who wrote a series of texts exhorting wealthy men to donate to the arts. These tracts on \u201cthe social potential of money\u201d rank cultural patronage higher than meddlesome social reforms. Improve man\u2019s soul and its aesthetic faculties, and his will follows.<\/p>\n

Today\u2019s European aesthetes seem unable to lift a finger and risk disturbing their otium<\/i>, while America\u2019s ruling class can\u2019t fathom the reason for such an \u201cimmaterial\u201d investment. But Renaissance patrons like Chigi somehow managed to maintain a standard of cultural nobility while pursuing business. Their industriousness did not degrade the looks of their surroundings but served as the prerequisite of their transformation into poetry, whose major mode is glorification.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

On the Villa Farnesina, Rome.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2531,"featured_media":147518,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"_eb_attr":"","advgb_blocks_editor_width":"","advgb_blocks_columns_visual_guide":"","wds_primary_category":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[472],"tags":[647,745,789,773,833,679],"dispatch-city":[3295],"acf":{"participants":{"simple_value_formatted":"","value_formatted":"","value":"","field":{"ID":0,"key":"field_65fb0bff29d65","label":"Participants","name":"participants","aria-label":"","prefix":"acf","type":"user","value":null,"menu_order":0,"instructions":"","required":0,"id":"","class":"","conditional_logic":0,"parent":"group_651c53615a3f7","wrapper":{"width":"","class":"","id":""},"role":"","return_format":"object","multiple":1,"allow_null":0,"bidirectional":0,"bidirectional_target":[],"_name":"participants","_valid":1}},"featured_image_credits":{"simple_value_formatted":"","value_formatted":"","value":"","field":{"ID":0,"key":"field_651c536113a8e","label":"Featured Image Credits","name":"featured_image_credits","aria-label":"","prefix":"acf","type":"wysiwyg","value":null,"menu_order":1,"instructions":"","required":0,"id":"","class":"","conditional_logic":0,"parent":"group_651c53615a3f7","wrapper":{"width":"","class":"","id":""},"default_value":"","tabs":"all","toolbar":"basic","media_upload":0,"delay":0,"_name":"featured_image_credits","_valid":1}},"enable_paywall":{"simple_value_formatted":"No","value_formatted":false,"value":"0","field":{"ID":0,"key":"field_66009169342f2","label":"Enable Paywall","name":"enable_paywall","aria-label":"","prefix":"acf","type":"true_false","value":null,"menu_order":2,"instructions":"","required":0,"id":"","class":"","conditional_logic":0,"parent":"group_651c53615a3f7","wrapper":{"width":"","class":"","id":""},"message":"","default_value":0,"ui":0,"ui_on_text":"","ui_off_text":"","_name":"enable_paywall","_valid":1}}},"author_meta":{"display_name":"Shane Devine","author_link":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/author\/shane-devine\/"},"featured_img":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/07farnes-300x177.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/03\/07farnes.jpg","coauthors":[],"tax_additional":{"categories":{"linked":["Dispatch<\/a>"],"unlinked":["Dispatch<\/span>"]},"tags":{"linked":["Art<\/a>","Books<\/a>","France<\/a>","Photography<\/a>","Renaissance<\/a>","Rome<\/a>"],"unlinked":["Art<\/span>","Books<\/span>","France<\/span>","Photography<\/span>","Renaissance<\/span>","Rome<\/span>"]}},"comment_count":0,"relative_dates":{"created":"Posted 6 months ago","modified":"Updated 3 months ago"},"absolute_dates":{"created":"Posted on January 16, 2024","modified":"Updated on April 9, 2024"},"absolute_dates_time":{"created":"Posted on January 16, 2024 3:45 pm","modified":"Updated on April 9, 2024 5:42 pm"},"featured_img_caption":"","series_order":"","jetpack-related-posts":[],"mfb_rest_fields":["author_meta","featured_img","jetpack_sharing_enabled","jetpack_featured_media_url","coauthors","tax_additional","comment_count","relative_dates","absolute_dates","absolute_dates_time","featured_img_caption","series_order","jetpack-related-posts"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/147262"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2531"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=147262"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/147262\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":147517,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/147262\/revisions\/147517"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/147518"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=147262"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=147262"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=147262"},{"taxonomy":"dispatch-city","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newcriterion.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/dispatch-city?post=147262"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}