Research

Veronese and the Crises of Late Sixteenth-Century Venice

Nils Weber | Doktorand

Veronese: The Raising of Lazarus, oil on canvas, Hermitage Museum St. Petersburg, 1584

The last decades of the sixteenth century were a time of severe crisis for the Venetian Republic: From 1575-77 the Venetians suffered one of the worst plague outbreaks in their entire history, followed by famine and a devastating blow to the economy due to the discovery of new oceanic trade routes around the Cape of Good Hope to India and the East Indies. These crises triggered not only changes in the religious practices of the Venetians, but affected also the production of images.

Veronese in particular, who self-fashioned himself as the first painter of the Venetian »magnificenza« with his monumental representations of feasts, faced the potential danger of alienating himself from the new climate in the Republic. He therefore developed in his late works a new pictorial language that sought to convey the religious messages of redemption more drastically in accordance with the demands of the new leading political faction in Venice of the so-called »giovani«.

To analyze this last phase of the artists career, my dissertation project focuses on the different sociopolitical contexts from which Veronese’s late works emerged. Thus, the project will bring together a series of case studies that include such diverse individuals as the »cittadino« Simone Lando, the nuns of the reform movement of the Cassinese Congregation and Veronese’s paintings for the Islamophilic »Scuola del Santissimo Sacramento«.

The characteristic features of Veronese’s late works – for example the emotional and direct communication of his figures as well as the dark chromaticism – are thus interpreted as elements of a continuous experimentation with which the artist responded to the demands of a fast-changing reality during a time when the loss of political and economic power of the Republic was accompanied by a last creative outburst of sixteenth century Venetian culture.

Newsletter

Our Newsletter provides you with free information on events, tenders, exhibitions and recent publications from the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz.

If you would like to receive our newsletter, please enter your name and e-mail address:

*required field

Notes on the content of the newsletter and transit procedures

This letter is sent via MailChimp, where your e-mail address and name will be saved for sending the newsletter.

Once you have completed the form, you will receive a "Double-Opt-In-E-Mail," in which you are asked to confirm your registration. You can cancel your subscription to the Newsletter at any time ("Opt-out"). You will find an unsubscribe link in every Newsletter and in the Double-Opt-in-E-Mail.

You will receive detailed information about transit procedures and your withdrawal options in our privacy policy.