The Calling of Saint Matthew
The Calling of Saint Matthew | |
---|---|
Italian: Vocazione di San Matteo | |
Artist | Caravaggio |
Year | 1599–1600 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 322 cm × 340 cm (127 in × 130 in) |
Location | San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome |
The Calling of Saint Matthew is an oil painting by Caravaggio that depicts the moment Jesus Christ calls on the tax collector Matthew to follow him. It was completed in 1599–1600 for the Contarelli Chapel in the church of the French congregation, San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome, where it remains. It hangs alongside two other paintings of Matthew by Caravaggio, The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew (painted around the same time as the Calling) and The Inspiration of Saint Matthew (1602).
Commission
More than a decade earlier, Cardinal Matthieu Cointerel (in Italian, Matteo Contarelli) had left funds and specific instructions in his will for the decoration of a chapel based on themes related to his namesake, Saint Matthew. The dome of the chapel was decorated with frescoes by the late Mannerist artist Giuseppe Cesari, Caravaggio's former employer and one of the most popular painters in Rome at the time. But as Cesari became busy with royal and papal patronage, Cardinal Francesco Del Monte, Caravaggio's patron and also the prefect of the Fabbrica of St Peter's (the Vatican office for Church property), intervened to obtain for Caravaggio his first major church commission and his first painting with more than a handful of figures.[citation needed]
Caravaggio's Calling of Saint Matthew hangs opposite The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew. While the Martyrdom was probably the first to be started, the Calling was, by report, the first to be completed.[citation needed] The commission for these two lateral paintings — the Calling and the Martyrdom — is dated July 1599, and final payment was made in July 1600. Between the two, at the altar, is The Inspiration of Saint Matthew (1602).[citation needed]
Subject matter
The painting depicts the story from the Gospel of Matthew (Matthew 9:9): "Jesus saw a man named Matthew at his seat in the custom house, and said to him, "Follow me", and Matthew rose and followed Him." Caravaggio depicts Matthew the tax collector sitting at a table with four other men. Jesus Christ and Saint Peter have entered the room, and Jesus is pointing at Matthew. A beam of light illuminates the faces of the men at the table who are looking at Jesus Christ. This is a depiction of a moment of spiritual awakening and conversion, which was something many Baroque artists were interested in painting, especially Caravaggio.[1]
Identity of Matthew
There is some debate over which man in the picture is Saint Matthew, as the surprised gesture of the bearded man at the table can be read in two ways.[citation needed]
Most writers on the Calling assume Saint Matthew to be the bearded man, and see him to be pointing at himself, as if to ask "Me?" in response to Christ's summons. This theory is strengthened when one takes into consideration the other two works in this series, The Inspiration of Saint Matthew, and The Martyrdom of Saint Matthew. The bearded man who models as Saint Matthew appears in all three works, with him unequivocally playing the role of Saint Matthew in both the "Inspiration" and the "Martyrdom".[citation needed]
A more recent interpretation proposes that the bearded man is in fact pointing at the young man at the end of the table, whose head is slumped. In this reading, the bearded man is asking "Him?" in response to Christ's summons, and the painting is depicting the moment immediately before a young Matthew raises his head to see Christ. Other writers describe the painting as deliberately ambiguous.[2]
Identity of Christ
Some scholars speculate that Jesus is portrayed as the Last Adam or Second Adam as titled in the New Testament. This is displayed in Christ's hand as it reaches out towards Matthew. It is almost a mirrored image of Adam's hand in The Creation of Adam by Michelangelo, the namesake of Caravaggio.[3] Twice in the New Testament, an explicit comparison is made between Jesus and Adam. In Romans 5:12–21, Paul argues that "just as through the disobedience of the one man the many were made sinners, so also through the obedience of the one man the many will be made righteous" (Romans 5:19, NIV). In 1 Corinthians 15:22, Paul argues that "as in Adam all die, so in Christ, all will be made alive," while in verse 45 he calls Jesus the "last/ultimate/final Adam".[4][circular reference]
Style
This section possibly contains original research. (May 2012) |
"This clear legibility, so different from many Mannerist paintings, ... accounted for the work's enormous popularity."[1] The position of Christ's hand, however, reflects that of Adam's in the Sistine Chapel; the Church considered Christ to be the Second Adam. But instead of being gifted life, as the first Adam was, Christ is instead the one who bestows it, calling Levi to a new life as Matthew.[5]
Responses
Pope Francis has said that he often went to San Luigi as a young man to contemplate the painting. Referring both to Christ's outstretched arm and Matthew's response, Francis said, "This is me, a sinner on whom the Lord has turned his gaze."[6]
Other paintings of the same topic
There are many other early modern representations of the calling of Matthew. Two were painted prior to Caravaggio's but it is unlikely that Caravaggio would have encountered them.[citation needed]
- Carpaccio's version in the Accademia in Venice[7]
- Marinus van Reymerswaele's version (1536)[8]
- Giovanni Lanfranco's derivative version (1626–28)[9]
- Spanish painter Juan de Pareja's version (1661)[10] found in the Prado Museum in Madrid.
- Hendrick ter Brugghen[11]
- Bernardo Strozzi's version (1620) in the Art Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts[12]
- Other related paintings of cardsharps include the Caravaggisti depiction of Valentin de Boulogne in the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.[13]
See also
Further reading
- Jürgen Müller: Wer ist Matthäus? Eine neue Deutung von Caravaggios ‚Berufung des heiligen Matthäus‘ aus der Contarelli-Kapelle, in: Kunstgeschichte. Open Peer Reviewed Journal, 2021, [2]
References
- ^ "Caravaggio, Calling of St. Matthew – Smarthistory". smarthistory.org. Retrieved 2023-02-22.
- ^ John L. Varriano, Caravaggio: The Art of Realism (Penn State Press, 2006), p.111.
- ^ "The Calling of Saint Matthew". Artble.
- ^ Last Adam
- ^ Lavin, Irving (1993). "Caravaggio's Calling of St. Matthew: The Identity of the Protagonist". Past-Present: Essays on Historicism in Art from Donatello to Picasso. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-0520068162.
- ^ Antonio Spadaro, S.J., A big heart open to God: The exclusive interview with Pope Francis, America, Published 30 September 2013, Retrieved 21 September 2013
- ^ "Web Gallery of Art, searchable fine arts image database". www.wga.hu.
- ^ "Web Gallery of Art, searchable fine arts image database". www.wga.hu.
- ^ "Giovanni Lanfranco". 28 September 2007. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
- ^ "The Calling of St. Matthew". www.usc.edu. Archived from the original on 11 January 2001. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
- ^ "Web Gallery of Art, searchable fine arts image database". www.wga.hu.
- ^ "Worcester Art Museum - The Calling of Saint Matthew". www.worcesterart.org.
- ^ "Valentin de Boulogne: Soldiers Playing Cards and Dice (The Cheats)". www.nga.gov. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
Sources
- ^ John Gash, Caravaggio, 2003 ISBN 1-904449-22-0
- Helen Langdon, Caravaggio: A Life, 1998 ISBN 0-374-11894-9
External links
- Calling of St. Matthew Analysis and Critical Reception
- ibiblio.org
- "Seeing an Old Masterpiece with New Eyes" (Elizabeth Lev in Zenit)
- smARThistory: Caravaggio's Calling of St. Matthew Archived 2007-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
- Media related to The Calling of Saint Matthew by Caravaggio at Wikimedia Commons