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Baroque art in Southern Italy
The term itself Baroque originally comes from the
Portuguese word “barroco” that means an
irregularly-shaped pearl, an obvious reference to
the ornate sculptural motifs distinctive of Baroque
architecture.
In Italy the Baroque period began at the end of the
1500s, clearly with many local art trends that
become parts of local culture.
It’s obviously not a mistake to intend Baroque as a
resultant of the influence of the Renaissance and
part of Romanesque and Gothic art periods. Clearly
"Proto-Baroque" forms are palpable in the work of
Michelangelo, while Bernini's works are almost
entirely in Baroque style. The movement emerged
between the Mannerist and Rococo periods, and
especially in southern Italy persisted as a
predominant form till the end of the eighteenth
century. Baroque art is encountered in residential
architecture (palaces) as much as ecclesiastical
buildings like churches and monasteries. Baroque
churches are typified by wide naves and, compared to
Gothic structures, rather low ceilings crowned by
high cupolas (domes). Painting, music and even
philosophy also expressed this art spirit, with its
emphasis on glorification of the human and divine
spirit.
Sicilian
Baroque
Baroque in Sicily was historically introduced a few
decades later than the rest of Italy. Many observers
say that the Baroque art and architecture of Sicily
may not constitute a distinct style within the
Baroque movement, but they reflect a deep
regionalization evident in many parts of Italy.
In Sicily,
Ragusa
and
Noto
are celebrated for their Baroque architecture.
Catania's
old district is more or less entirely Baroque, and
most of Palermo and other smaller Sicilian cities
have numerous Baroque structures. While many of
Sicily's churches and palaces built in the
eighteenth century are more properly described as
part of the Rococo period, their style is often a
close picture of the pure Baroque style.
Historically,
because the Catholic Church came to consider the
Baroque as the essence of artistic expression of the
glorification of God, an unfortunate attempt to
redesign medieval churches into Baroque ones was
born. Palermo Cathedral suffered this fate, and so
did many smaller churches built during the Norman
and Swabian periods. Some have been restored to
their former original states, though this has met
with varying degrees of success.
New street plans were developed and a number of
churches and palaces were built in a novel "Sicilian
Baroque" after the 1693’s earthquake which virtually
destroyed a number of southeastern towns (Noto,
Ragusa) and heavily damaged Catania. This new
“Sicilian Baroque” style started originally from the
movements then prevalent in Rome, Madrid and the
rest of Italy. Therefore, a degree of stylistic
division may be drawn among the products of this new
Baroque movement and the new structures erected in
Catania after the volcanic eruption of 1669 which
destroyed most of that city. The baroque city that
emerged after the eruption in Catania was created
mostly by Giovanni Battista Vaccarini (1702-1769),
who devoted 3 decades of his life to pulling a new
Baroque Catania out of the ashes.
The “Sicilian Baroque” movement reached its height
in the 1740s, but within a few decades the
Neo-Classical movement was becoming popular, and the
facades and naves of various new or restored
churches actually featured essentials of both
styles.
Most of Sicily's Norman-Arab and Romanesque-Gothic
churches were built to be viewed in their entirety,
from every imaginable angle, inside and out. Many of
the new Baroque ones, however, were built with
impressive facades rich of ornaments on the external
side, as if they were element of a theatrical stage.
And in a certain sense, they most likely were the
physical symbol of the society's prosperity.
Many observers either love or hate Baroque style.
Indifference is rare, and in church architecture
there is a subtle rivalry between the Gothic and
Baroque camps, sometimes an expression of Protestant
versus Catholic sentiment. Compromises can be
bizarre. For example, Palermo's main Jesuit church,
Casa Professa, is a masterpiece of intricate Baroque
lines and ornate Rococo stone inlay, but the latest
addition of stained-glass windows (a "Gothic"
characteristic missing in most Baroque churches
whose magnificence relies on unfiltered sunlight)
creates an overwhelming effect beyond the
imagination of even the most adamant proponents of
the Baroque.
In
Palermo,
the Quattro Canti crossroads remains today the most
generous example of the overly adorned squares and
streets. Private palaces were also richly adorned,
with sculptures ranging from angels to nymphs to
gargoyles.
Giacomo Serpotta, the master of the Palermitan
celebrated oratories, born in Palermo in 1656,
specialized in adorning church oratories with molded
plasterwork in ornamental frames. His masterpieces
“Palermo's Oratory of the Rosary”, is in the church
of Santa Zita.
Noto,
in southeastern Sicily, is another city that was
rebuilt in the baroque style after the earthquake.
The unity of the
baroque style in the “Noto Valley”
remains unequaled anywhere else on the island and
for this reason has been included by Unesco in their
prestigious, coveted World Heritage List.
The city is about 30 km from Siracusa, and has an
extraordinary homogeneous town planning. It was
built in to an octagonal plan and is crossed through
by the main streets. This “stone garden”, as it is
commonly called come, contains a never ending number
of Baroque monuments that appear on the streets and
squares. The material most commonly used is
limestone, which creates an extremely spectacular
effect at sunset, when the sunlight brings out a
pinkish hue from the majestic facades. Piazza
Municipio in the center of
the town, has an impressive stairway that takes up
to the Cathedral of San Giorgio, surrounded by
imposing other Baroque buildings such as Palazzo
Vescovile, Palazzo Ducezio and Palazzo Landolina di
Sant'Alfano.
Another Baroque city is
Ragusa.
With his San Giorgio Cathedral it’s a precious
example of the Sicilian Baroque. Erected on the old
Church of San Nicoḷ, it was destroyed by the 1693
earthquake. The reconstruction was initiated in 1738
and completed in 1775. The design, whose project is
still preciously preserved, belongs to Rosario
Gagliardi from Siracusa, a major author of the
post-quake reconstruction of the Noto Valley.
BAROCCO LECCESE
Lecce,
the capital of Salento, has always been considered a
noble city, the most noble one in the southern
region of Apulia, admired for the fine cultural
heritage reflected in its architecture, churches and
old palaces. The city is indeed a refined and
precious Baroque gem, offering its citizens and
guests a delicate brocade of amazing sights: a play
of light and shadow, the vine-laced contours of a
well, the leaves of an ancient capital, the cherub’s
wings.
The period from the late 1500's to the mid-1600's
marks Lecce's finest period, and a lot of monuments
and religious buildings continue to testify its
prosperous history. The city is still today one the
Italian symbol of baroque, perhaps the most
exceptional.
Both monarchy and church considered art a way to
celebrate their glory, and desired to leave an
enduring symbol of it over history. The baroque of
Lecce is quite singular and different for the
standard style, and can be discovered through the
lovely balconies, windows and doors all decked out
in stony floral garlands. Art often reveals the soul
of a population, and Lecce’s baroque is
representative of the town but also of the entire
region.
The unique Lecce’s stone, contributed to make this
town elegant and refined, rich in history and
culture. This extremely ductile and friable
particular white stone, different from the ones in
the rest of Italy, has permitted the creation of
unique masterpieces of art. Used in buildings,
facades of churches and in the richly decorated
altars inside them, the characteristic use of this
stone is always of an exceptional beauty.
The recurring presence of fruits, flowers,
anthropomorphisms and mythological references in the
delicate carvings that are upon the architectural
structures of the city evoke the antique myths and
tradition that are a fundamental par t
of Salento folklore. Today Lecce is like an open air
stage, showing bas-reliefs, statues of saints,
zoomorphic and anthropomorphic caryatids, griffins,
winged horses, “putti” and large flower and fruit
trophies. The facades of the churches and the altars
chiseled by the imagination of the artists,
intentionally glorified the great quantity of fruits
offered by this land and as reminder of the
agricultural spirit of this culture. So the baroque
can be considered not only a hymn to the Lord to
thank Him for His generosity and grace, but also a
symbol of the city itself, full of pride and
coquetry.
For its critical geographical position hard to
defend, many times Lecce was victim of opportunist
attacks. The city began a peaceful era after the
defeat of the Turkish fleet at Lepanto in 1571. The
following arrival of religious orders (Jesuits, the
Teatini and Franciscans) brought a large extent of
wealth which was reflected in the building of
magnificent churches and palaces and it’s this
architectural extravagance that still characterizes
the city. The “Barocco Leccese” flowery style owed
as much to the material to hand as to the ability of
the artist: the soft white local sandstone could be
intricately carved and then hardened with time.
Unluckily, present smog is a problem for many of the
buildings, keeping the mass of stonemasons and
carpenters who still work in Lecce very busy.
“Sant’Oronzo”
square, in the heart of the old part of Lecce, is
characterized in his south side by the 20,000 seated
spectators of the “Anfiteatro Romano”, which was
built in the time of roman emperor Hadrian.
The best baroque churches are all at short distance
from the main “Sant’Oronzo” square. The finest,
certainly the most spectacular, is the Basilica of
Santa Croce, whose elaborate facade, the effort of
the local architect Antonio Zimbalo, took almost 150
years to be finished, its upper half a riot of
ornamental garlands and flowers around a central
rose window. Not far from it, the Church of Santa
Chiara, is a must stop; filled of decoration, its
interior is full of small chapels groaning with
garlands and gilt. The decorated facade with
twisting columns of the Church of San Giovanni
Battista by the Porta Rudiae in the southwest corner
of town is another Zimbalo’s baroque masterpiece to
see.
The town of
Otranto,
just 30 kilometers south of
Lecce, is famous
for its beautiful castle and his oriental
atmosphere. The wonderful Cathedral with its portal
and rose window from the late 15th century and its
polychrome mosaic of the 12th century gives
astonishment of the city even to the most detached
visitor.
There are also numerous other beautiful examples of
Baroque art in many other towns of the Salento
Province: the wonderful sanctuary of the “Crocifisso
della Pietà” in Galatone,
and the famous baroque “Piazza Salandra” in Nardo’.
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