The
Taking of Christ
By
Caravaggio ( 1602)
National
Gallery of Ireland
One of the very interesting things about The Taking
of Christ by Caravaggio is the way in which he utilises other senses in the
work, thus heightening the already overloaded visual content with an aural
element also which I personally think heightens the intensity of the impact of
the audience ( notice I did not say viewer ), as they are not only being
assaulted by an overwhelmingly visual experience, they are also being bombarded
aurally.
Samuel Beckett made the very interesting observation
when discussing the orchestral work of Beethoven that the composer used to harness
silence in order to lend greater poignancy to the music that prefigured the
pause, and of course which came after. In a very similar way, I would postulate
that Caravaggio in this very impressive work uses what could be described as a
semiotics of sound particular in the remarkable gesture of the apostle on the
extreme left in the painting who has his arms outstretched in such a dramatic
fashion, almost like the movements of the arms of a conductor bringing an orchestra to a climax,
or to a Beethovenian pause! Their very symbolism, placed directly alongside the
head of the Christ figure, help as a counterstroke, literally, to the main
event which is being depicted; the kiss that Judas places upon Christ’s cheek
as a signal to the soldiers accompanying him that this is the man they are
looking for. The fact that the painting hangs in the National Gallery of
Ireland, opposite Merrion Square only a few paces from the house where Oscar
Wilde was born is simply a remarkable coincidence; Wilde of course famously
wrote:
Yet
each man kills the thing he loves,
By
each let this be heard,
Some
do it with a bitter look,
Some
with a flattering word,
The
coward does it with a kiss,
The
brave man with a sword!
Though Wilde could not have been referring to the
Caravaggio, as the painting was only discovered long after his death in the
1990s in the house of the Jesuits not far from Merrion Square on Leeson Street.
The fact that Caravaggio paints himself into the
canvas holding a lantern up over the assembled group, so that he can actually
see the face of Christ ( one is reminded of the Rolling Stones song from
the album Exile on Main Street ) merely adds to the drama of the moment.
Caravaggio was a violent man, he had fled his native Milan in 1592 after having
had a violent encounter with a police officer, wounding him, and he when after
successfully setting himself up in Rome, he was soon seen swaggering around the
capital city with apparently a manservant in tow, duelling with anyone who was
brave enough to take him on. Caravaggio, like Wilde, was a gay man, but unlike
Oscar he was also an incredibly violent one. He eventual murdered the son of a
powerful family 4 years after The Betrayal of Christ and was eventually
to die in very dubious circumstance in 1610 having spent his last four years
trying to evade his fate. Accounts differ as to how he actually met his fate,
but some think that the family of the young man whom he killed finally might
have finally caught up with him. Whatever way he did eventually meet his death,
his life was one of violence and we can not only see this in this magnificent
work, as I have already said, we can also, if we listen very carefully, hear
it!
We should not be so surprised, Arthur Rimbaud, the
famous 19th century French poet, in a letter to Paul Demeny ( 1871) ,
writes of the ‘systematic derangement of the senses’ in which the poet, or in
this case artist, can see sound, hear sight! By re-organising in the work of
art the different senses in this manner, the poet writes, one could better
intensify the work and therefore make it all the more Real. Total
communication. Ideas of inclusivity being triggered here too of course, over
100 years before Howard Gardner ( 1983) popularised the idea of multiple intelligences
and which has had such far reaching consequences on teaching methodologies
today, particularly in terms of presenting school curriculums within the
context of inclusivity. Artists like Caravaggio, Beethoven and Rimbaud (geniuses
all) are simply total communicators, utilising every sense imaginable, and
twisting them, in order to get their ideas across. This is what is happening in
Caravaggio’s The Taking of Christ. We, the audience,
are privy to the great darkening storm which is going on in the tableaux. The chiaroscuro
technique is of course not just literally technical brilliance, it is also
metaphorically imbued to the point of complete breakdown. For the dark is
vision eternal of the errant wanderer. Caravaggio would go onto spend the remainder
of his life fleeing from his pursuers who would hunt him till the ends of the
earth and on his way he would paint religious paintings, each more devasting as
the next. The contents getting darker and darker, think of David with the
Head of Goliath which he painted in his final year. There he is as the
decapitated head of the monster, he knew the darkness was eventually going to
close in; you can hear it whispering to you like a fell wind.
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