Italian school of the XVII century.
"Road to Calvary".
Oil on canvas.
Relined. Modern stretcher frame.
Provenance: important private collection.
Measurements: 148 x 162 cm.
Open live auction
DESCRIPTION
Italian school of the XVII century.
"Road to Calvary".
Oil on canvas.
Relined. Modern stretcher frame.
Provenance: important private collection.
Measurements: 148 x 162 cm.
This painting, of monumental dimensions and Italian school of the XVII century, represents a deeply moving passage of the Via Crucis: the moment in which Christ, overwhelmed by the weight of the cross, crosses with his mother, the Virgin Mary, accompanied by St. John the Evangelist and Mary Magdalene. In the center of the scene, Jesus advances with difficulty, overflowing with resigned pain, with a tense body and an expressive gaze. The cross, solid, of dark wood, imposes itself not only as an instrument of sacrifice but also as the compositional axis that organizes the scene. The Virgin pales before the vision of the Son. At her side, St. John, the beloved disciple, covers his face with his mantle in a gesture of deep drama, restrained but eloquent, while Mary Magdalene consoles the Virgin. Flanking Jesus, a Roman soldier, with a hardened face and imperative attitude, introduces the necessary note of violence to the narrative, while another character carries the nails and other instruments of torture.
The rocky and broken background, resolved with a grave brushstroke and earthy tones, frames the scene in an inhospitable landscape that reinforces the penitent character of the passage. It is not a simple decoration, but a symbolic extension of suffering and desolation: Golgotha as a spiritual geography.
Compositionally, it seems to be inspired in part by the famous "Fall on the Road to Calvary" by Raphael Sanzio (ca. 1517), in the spatial arrangement of the architectural and landscape elements. As in Raphael's work, the barely pointed architectural element acts as a stabilizing axis and vanishing point, marking the symbolic entrance to the sacred drama. This resource, typical of the late Renaissance, is taken up again by the Baroque with new emotional intensities, and in this painting it serves to emphasize the gravity of the moment and articulate the depth of the space.
In short, this work not only takes up Raphael's visual and compositional motifs, but reinterprets his language in the more somber and pathetic light of the 17th century, amalgamating Renaissance harmony with the Baroque dramatization of redemptive suffering.
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