Ecstasy of St Theresa

Ecstasy of St Theresa

Sculpture


title = Ecstasy of St. Teresa
artist = Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini
year = 1647-1652
height=150
type = Marble
city = Rome
museum = Santa Maria della Vittoria

"The Ecstasy of St. Teresa" (alternatively "St. Teresa in Ecstasy" or "Transverberation of St. Teresa") is the central marble group of a sculpture complex designed and completed by Giovanni Lorenzo Bernini for the Cornaro Chapel of Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome. It is one of the sculptural masterpieces of High Roman Baroque.

The entire ensemble was overseen and completed by a mature Bernini during the Pamphili papacy of Innocent X. During this time, the sculptor's past involvement with the profligate expenses of the prior Barberini papacy had disgraced Bernini and deprived him of much Vatican patronage. The services of Bernini's studio were thus available to a patron such as the Venetian Cardinal Federico Cornaro (1579-1673). Cornaro had chosen the otherwise nondescript church of the Discalced Carmelites for his burial chapel. He had reason to avoid burial in Venice, since his appointment as a cardinal by Urban VIII (Barberini) while his father Giovanni was Doge had created a furor in his home-city, which banned families from holding such powerful positions simultaneously. The chapel chosen had previously depicted "St. Paul in Ecstasy", and the Cardinal replaced it with the ecstatic event undergone by the first Carmelite saint, recently canonized in 1622. [Boucher B. p135]

It was completed in 1652 for the then exorbitant sum of 12,000 scudi (c. $120,000). [ [http://www.thamesandhudson.com/books/Italian_Baroque_Sculpture/0500203075.mxs/37/31/ Italian Baroque Sculpture : Books : Thames & Hudson ] ] The chapel is an explosion of colored marble, metal, and detail. Light filters though a window above "Teresa", underscored by gilded rays. The dome is frescoed with the illusionistic cherub-filled sky with the descending light of the Holy Ghost allegorized as a dove. On the side walls, are life-size reliefs of the Cornaro family, present and discussing the event.

The two focal sculptural figures derive from an episode described by Teresa of Avila in her autobiography, "The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus" (1515-1582), a mystical cloistered Discalced Carmelite reformer and nun. The chapter describes divine visions, including one where she saw a young, beautiful, and lambent angel standing aside her body:

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. [Chapter XXIX; Part 17, Teresa's "Autobiography"]

Critical assessment

Some modern criticsWho|date=September 2008 have derided the semi-syncopal religious experiences as veiled orgasmic phenomena rather than spiritual encounters; in particular, the body posture and facial expression of St. Teresa have caused some to assign her experience as one of climactic moment. [ [http://www.criticalmethods.org/bodtwo.htm QM2 Proceedings Paper ] ] However, Robert Harbison has expressed his doubt that Bernini, a follower of the mystical exercises of followers of St. Ignatius of Loyola, would have intended to depict here an episode of lust fulfilled [Harbison, R. p23.] . Instead, Bernini aims to express the facial and body equivalents of a state of divine joy. It is arguable that in the seventeenth century, it was possible to draw distinctions between religious and erotic experience that are more difficult to make today.Fact|date=September 2008

Teresa is experiencing a transfiguring coma, the "Sleep of God", described by mystics, in which a glimpse of glory is received. Mystics like Teresa would pray for days, often unfed, to achieve such visions. It would have not been unusual for devout daily church-goer like Bernini to spend hours at prayer each day, seeking this experience. The expression here is more like that of the joy of heavenly encounter found in Bernini's "Blessed Ludovica Albertoni" in her deathbed.Fact|date=September 2008

This scenographic chapel unites lifelong themes for Bernini. True to Baroque sentiment, it illustrates a moment where divinity intrudes on an earthly body. Irving Lavin said "the transverberation becomes a point of contact between earth and heaven, between matter and spirit" [ Boucher, B. p138] . But the dichotomy of the conceit in this artwork echoes further in conjoining joy and pain in Teresa's expression and the conjunction of gilded rays with rippled stone. The unity of architecture, theater, and sculpture found in this complex is a quintessential baroque feature, with the Holy Ghost as light bathing or guided by the gilded rays framing the stature from windows atop the chapel, allowing the sky to enter church.Fact|date=September 2008

The effects are theatrical, including the discourse the saint renders among the flanking Cornaro pedigree. [ [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/bio/b/bernini/gianlore/biograph.html Cornaro family in oratory boxes.] ] The cherubic details around Teresa may repel a secular minimalist, yet they add to the notion that we are seeing a moment of time where God has intruded into one woman's soul, if not pierced her literal body.Fact|date=September 2008

imilar works by Bernini

*See also entry titled found in the Baroque section.
*"Death of the Blessed Ludovica Albertoni" (1671-74) - San Francesco a Ripa, Rome.
*"Martyrdom of Saint Lawrence" (1614-15) [ [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/bio/b/bernini/gianlore/biograph.html| St. Lawrence] ]
*"Truth Unveiled by Time" (1646-52) - Galleria Borghese, Rome. [ [http://www.galleriaborghese.it/borghese/en/everita.htm Official Site Borghese Gallery Bernini - Truth Unveiled by Time ] ]

Works influencing or influenced by this sculpture

*Stefano Maderno's sculpture of "St Cecilia" in namesake church (1600).
*Melchiorre Caffà's "Santa Rose of Lima" (1665) and his "Assumption of St Catherine".
*Francisco Aprile and Ercole Ferrata's "Sant'Anastasia" in her namesake church in Rome.
* The most internationally successful Czech underground group the Ecstasy of Saint Theresa named themselves after the sculpture.
* "Angels and Demons", the bestselling novel by Dan Brown which lists the sculpture as the third altar of science of the Illuminati
* The sculpture is the subject of the song "The Lie" from the Peter Hammill album "The Silent Corner and the Empty Stage".
* Numerous references to the sculpture, including one character's obsession, are made in Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace.
* Street artist, Banksy used the image of St. Theresa in one of his works, though he removed the angelic figure and added a fast food meal. [http://www.banksy.co.uk/outdoors/images/landscapes/macdonna.jpg]

Gallery

Notes

References

*Howard Hibbard, "Bernini".
*cite book | author= Robert Harbison | year=2000 | title = Reflections on Baroque | chapter= The Case for Disruption | editor= | others= | pages= 1-32 | publisher= The University of Chicago Press | id= | url= | authorlink=
*cite book | author= Bruce Boucher| year=1998| title= Italian Baroque Sculpture| chapter= | editor= Thames & Hudson, World of Art| others= | pages= 134-143 | publisher= | id= | url= http://www.thamesandhudson.com/books/Italian_Baroque_Sculpture/0500203075.mxs/37/31/ | authorlink=
* [http://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/bio/b/bernini/gianlore/biograph.html Bernini biography] (click on "Ecstasy of St. Teresa")

External links

* [http://www.carmelite-seremban.org/Spirituality/saint29.html St Teresa of Avila: the piercing of her heart, Aug 26 - Optional Memorial]
* [http://smarthistory.org/blog/63/berninis-ecstasy-of-st-theresa-cornaro-chapel-rome-c-1650/ smARThistory: "Ecstasy of Saint Teresa", Cornaro Chapel, Rome]


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