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The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa (also known as Saint Teresa in Ecstasy or the Transverberation of Saint Teresa; Italian: L'Estasi di Santa Teresa or Santa Teresa in estasi) is a sculptural group in white marble set in an elevated aedicule in the Cornaro Chapel of the church of Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome. It was designed and completed by Gian Lorenzo Bernini, the leading sculptor of his day, who also designed the setting of the Chapel in marble, stucco and paint. It is generally considered to be one of the sculptural masterpieces of the High Roman Baroque. The sculpture depicts Teresa of Ávila, a Spanish Carmelite nun and saint, swooning in a state of religious ecstasy, while an angel holding a spear stands over her.

Ecstasy of Saint Teresa
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ArtistGian Lorenzo Bernini
Year1647–1652 (1647–1652)
Catalogue48
TypeSculpture
MediumMarble
DimensionsLife-size
LocationSanta Maria della Vittoria, Rome
Coordinates41°54′17″N 12°29′39″E
Preceded byRaimondi Chapel
Followed byTruth Unveiled by Time (Bernini)

Commission


The entire ensemble was overseen and completed by a mature Bernini during the Pamphili papacy of Innocent X. When Innocent acceded to the papal throne, he shunned Bernini's artistic services; the sculptor had been the favourite artist of the previous and profligate Barberini pope. Without papal patronage, the services of Bernini's studio were therefore available to a patron such as the Venetian Cardinal Federico Cornaro (1579–1653).

Cornaro had chosen the hitherto unremarkable church of the Discalced Carmelites for his burial chapel.[lower-alpha 1] The selected site for the chapel was the left transept that had previously held an image of 'St. Paul in Ecstasy', which was replaced by Bernini's dramatization of a religious experience undergone and related by the first Discalced Carmelite saint, who had been canonised not long before, in 1622.[1] It was completed in 1652 for the then princely sum of 12,000 scudi.[lower-alpha 2]

A small format terracotta model of about 47 cm (19 in) was created between 1644 and 1647. The sculpture represents the first embodiment of the project, with traces of Bernini's fingerprints still visible. The model belongs to the Hermitage Museum's collection.[3]


Sculptural group and its setting


Wider view, including the Cornaro portraits, but omitting the lower parts of the chapel
Wider view, including the Cornaro portraits, but omitting the lower parts of the chapel

The two central sculptural figures of the swooning nun and the angel with the spear derive from an episode described by Teresa of Avila, a mystical cloistered Discalced Carmelite reformer and nun, in her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus (1515–1582). Her experience of religious ecstasy in her encounter with the angel is described as follows:

I saw in his hand a long spear of gold, and at the iron's point there seemed to be a little fire. He appeared to me to be thrusting it at times into my heart, and to pierce my very entrails; when he drew it out, he seemed to draw them out also, and to leave me all on fire with a great love of God. The pain was so great, that it made me moan; and yet so surpassing was the sweetness of this excessive pain, that I could not wish to be rid of it. The soul is satisfied now with nothing less than God. The pain is not bodily, but spiritual; though the body has its share in it. It is a caressing of love so sweet which now takes place between the soul and God, that I pray God of His goodness to make him experience it who may think that I am lying.[4]

The group is illuminated by natural light which filters through a hidden window in the dome of the surrounding aedicule, and underscored by gilded stucco rays. Teresa is shown lying on a cloud indicating that this is intended to be a divine apparition we are witnessing. Other witnesses appear on the side walls; life-size high-relief donor portraits of male members of the Cornaro family, e.g. Cardinal Federico Cornaro and Doge Giovanni I Cornaro, are present and shown discussing the event in boxes as if at the theatre. Although the figures are executed in white marble, the aedicule, wall panels and theatre boxes are made from coloured marbles. Above, the vault of the Chapel is frescoed with an illusionistic cherub-filled sky with the descending light of the Holy Ghost allegorized as a dove.

The art historian Rudolf Wittkower wrote:

In spite of the pictorial character of the design as a whole, Bernini differentiated between various degrees of reality, the members of the Cornaro Chapel seem to be alive like ourselves. They belong to our space and our world. The supernatural event of Teresa's vision is raised to a sphere of its own, removed from that of the beholder mainly by virtue of the isolating canopy and the heavenly light.[5]


Interpretations


The effects are theatrical,[6] the Cornaro family seeming to observe the scene from their boxes,[7] and the chapel illustrates a moment where divinity intrudes on an earthly body. Caroline Babcock speaks of Bernini's melding of sensual and spiritual pleasure in the "orgiastic" grouping as both intentional and influential on artists and writers of the day.[8] Irving Lavin said "the transverberation becomes a point of contact between earth and heaven, between matter and spirit".[9] As Bernini biographer Franco Mormando points out, although Bernini's point of departure for his depiction of Teresa's mystical experience was her own description, there were many details about the experience that she never specifies (e.g., the position of her body) and that Bernini simply supplied from his own artistic imagination, all with an aim of increasing the nearly transgressively sensual charge of the episode: "Certainly no other artist, in rendering the scene, before or after Bernini, dared as much in transforming the saint's appearance."[10]


Similar works by Bernini



Influencing or influenced works



See also



References


Notes
  1. Cornaro had reason to avoid burial in Venice, since his appointment as a cardinal by Urban VIII while his father Giovanni was Doge had created a furor in his home-city, which banned families from holding such powerful positions simultaneously.
  2. Corresponding to c. $120,000[2]
Citations
  1. Boucher 1998, p. 135
  2. Italian Baroque Sculpture : Books : Thames & Hudson
  3. Hermitage Museum, The State. "The Ecstasy of St Teresa". Hermitage Museum. Archived from the original on 20 May 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  4. Teresa of Avila (1515–1582). The Life of Teresa of Jesus. Chapter XXIX; Part 17.
  5. Wittkower, Rudolf (1980). Art and Architecture in Italy 1600–1750, Pelican History of Art. p. 160.
  6. Greer, Thomas H.; Lewis, Gavin (2005). A Brief History of the Western World. p. 392.
  7. "Bernini, Ecstasy of Saint Teresa". Khan Academy.
  8. "Caroline Babcock". academia.edu.
  9. Boucher 1998, p. 138
  10. Mormando, Franco (2011). Bernini: His Life and His Rome. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 164. For a much expanded and fully annotated discussion of the question by Mormando, see his essay, "Did Bernini's Ecstasy of Saint Teresa Cross a 17th-Century Line of Decorum?
  11. "Web Gallery of Art, image collection, virtual museum, searchable database of European fine arts (1000–1900)". wga.hu.
  12. "Truth Unveiled by Time". Official Site Borghese Gallery Bernini. Archived from the original on 25 October 2005.
  13. "The Lie (Bernini's Saint Theresa) de Peter Hammill". Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2011.
  14. "A Field Guide to Occurrences of Bernini's Ecstasy of St. Teresa in Infinite Jest – Infinite Detox". Infinite Detox. 20 August 2009.
  15. "Banksy". banksy.co.uk. Archived from the original on 21 October 2007.
Sources


External video
Ecstasy of Saint Teresa
Preceded by
Ludovisi Battle sarcophagus
Landmarks of Rome
Ecstasy of Saint Teresa
Succeeded by
Raphael Rooms

На других языках


[de] Verzückung der heiligen Theresa

Die Verzückung der heiligen Theresa (auch Die Entrückung der heiligen Theresa genannt) ist eine Frontalskulptur von Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini. Das zwischen 1645 und 1652 entstandene 350 cm hohe Meisterwerk aus weißem Carraramarmor fasst mehrere Begebenheiten, von denen die Heilige in ihrem Selbstbekenntnis berichtet, zu einer Szene zusammen. Die Skulptur befindet sich heute im linken Querarm der Kirche Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rom, der Cornaro-Kapelle. Sie zeigt die heilige Theresa im Augenblick ihrer Vision, bei der ihr ein Engel mit dem Pfeil der göttlichen Liebe das Herz durchbohrt.
- [en] Ecstasy of Saint Teresa

[es] Éxtasis de Santa Teresa

El Éxtasis de Santa Teresa también conocido como la Transverberación de Santa Teresa (en italiano: L'Estasi di Santa Teresa o Santa Teresa in estasi o Transverberazione di santa Teresa) es un grupo escultórico en mármol obra del escultor y pintor Gian Lorenzo Bernini, de estilo barroco. [1]Fue realizada entre 1647 y 1652, por encargo del cardenal Cornaro, para ser colocada donde iría su tumba, en la Iglesia de Santa María de la Victoria (Santa Maria della Vittoria), en Roma, donde actualmente se encuentra, en la llamada Capilla Cornaro.[2] Santa Maria della Vittoria es una basílica del siglo XVII erigida para conmemorar la victoria del emperador Fernando II en la Batalla del Monte Blanco.

[it] Estasi di santa Teresa d'Avila

L'Estasi di santa Teresa d'Avila è una scultura in marmo e bronzo dorato di Gian Lorenzo Bernini, realizzata tra il 1645 e il 1652 e collocata nella cappella Cornaro, presso la chiesa di Santa Maria della Vittoria, a Roma. La scena raffigurata nell'opera è, per la precisione, una transverberazione e non un'estasi, quindi la scultura è talvolta chiamata anche "Transverberazione di santa Teresa d'Avila".

[ru] Экстаз святой Терезы

«Экстаз святой Терезы Авильской» (итал. Estasi di santa Teresa d'Avila) — алтарная скульптурная группа в капелле Корнаро римской церкви Санта-Мария-делла-Виттория, созданная в 1645—1652 годах выдающимся скульптором итальянского барокко Джованни Лоренцо Бернини по заказу венецианского кардинала Федерико Корнаро.



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