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(piano music)
Beth: We've just walked into the church of Santa Felicità.
We're looking into the chapel, just to the right of the entrance,
where we see Pontormo's great altarpiece.
Well, it's either an entombment or a deposition.
Steven: It's kind of a funny situation because
the painting is clearly in the early mannerist style,
and yet the chapel is a small, perfectly cubic space
that was designed by Brunelleschi
and is very much in the early Renaissance style,
so there's this funny contrast.
Also, the frescoes to the right by Pontormo
show the Enunciation.
That's a powerful [combination]
because you have this moment of Gabriel
coming to announce to the *** Mary that she will bear Christ,
and then this much more mournful scene much later,
when Christ has been lowered from the cross,
is about to be entombed,
and Mary is mourning his death.
They function as almost the beginning and end
of Christ's earthly existence.
Beth: And above that in the pendentives,
we see roundels, also by Pontormo,
showing the four evangelists.
Steven: I think that this notion of whether or not
it's an entombment or a deposition
is the result of the fact that Pontormo has taken out
many of the symbols that we would expect
in either of those scenes.
The cross is gone, the tomb is not apparent.
What's here instead is a very spare image of figures,
and really nothing but figures,
with the exception, perhaps, of a little bit of ground
and some clouds above.
Beth: If this was a deposition,
we would expect to see a ladder,
the lowering of the body of Christ from the cross.
If this were an entombment, we would expect,
as you said, to see the tomb.
Pontormo has given us nothing to
help understand the subject.
He's also not situated it in any kind of an earthly space
that's understandable,
which is such a difference from the style of the high Renaissance,
where providing an earthly setting for the figures was so important,
including using linear perspective.
Steven: That's right, and this is almost a rejection of that earthliness.
The figures are highly stylized,
and there is a kind of elegance.
Beth: And look at the two figures on either side,
how elongated their bodies are,
and that figure in the left foreground.
Look at his legs.
They're not really in any natural position.
Steven: No, it's almost like dance, actually.
Beth: We also think about the high Renaissance
in terms of a pyramid composition and of stability and balance,
and here, there's a sense almost of things moving
in lots of different directions at once.
If you think about Leonardo's Last Supper,
where the artist so clearly draws our eye
to the vanishing point,
with Pontormo, it feels like there's really no place
for our eye to rest.
Steven: This is to my eye
a composition that is full of constant movement.
Beth: We also expect in the high Renaissance
to see figures who have a sense of weight to their bodies.
Pontormo is disregarding so many of those things.
Look at the figure of Christ, the figures who support him.
Steven: Especially that crouching figure.
Beth: They're on their tippy-toes.
They can't possibly support him in that way.
Mary looks like she's about to faint.
There's something overwrought in the emotions
that the figures display.
Steven: It seems to me that these are not so much
the emotions of a person so much as symbols of emotions,
almost like masks.
Beth: And that sense of masking of artificiality,
of an art that's not based on nature
is really typical of mannerism,
and I think it's really important to remember
that we're here in Florence,
and Florence is no longer a republic.
There are also other historical considerations
like the Protestant Reformation
and Copernicus discovering that
the Earth revolves around the Sun.
Steven: So this was a period of real revolution,
and especially so in Florence.
I think that issue of the Medicis' return
and they're abolishing the Republic is crucial,
and of course the challenge that Martin Luther is posing.
Beth: Right.
Beth: Some people have seen the mannerist style
as like a style that expresses a new spirituality
as opposed to the naturalism of the early Renaissance
and that spirituality coming from the attacks on the Church
by Martin Luther.
Steven: It'll be really interesting to see how,
over the next hundred years,
the Counter-Reformation really causes significant shifts
in the style of art
and breaks with Renaissance conventions.
We're beginning to see here
just the first taste of those changes.
(piano music)