Friday, March 15, 2019

St. MARY OF THE HOLY MOUNTAIN

S. MARIA DI MONTESANTO
Begun in 1662 by Carlo Rainaldi (1611/91) for the Carmelite Fathers
Rainaldi's project was bound by the measures of the columns recycled from the destroyed Bernini's towers for St. Peter's Basilica, also used in the “twin” church S. Maria dei Miracoli
Continued since 1673 by Carlo Fontana (1634/1714) with funding from Cardinal Girolamo Gastaldi
In the years 1674/75 Fontana worked together with Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598/1680) who designed the DOME
“Because the areas of the two churches were of different sizes, symmetry, which here was essential, was not easy to obtain. Choosing an oval dome for the tighter area of S. Maria di Montesanto and a circular one for the wider S. Maria dei Miracoli, Rainaldi managed to give the impression that they had the same size and shape. One wonders if Rainaldi would have ever come up with the pseudo-symmetrical arrangement of these churches without the impression he received by Bernini's way of creating architecture” (Rudolf Wittkower)
Completed in 1679
Restored in 1825 when the dome was covered with shards of slate
In 1707 Georg Friedrich Händel, commissioned by Cardinal Carlo Colonna, composed psalms, motets and antiphons that were performed in this church for Vespers of the Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel
It is also known as the Church of Artists
“The cultural importance of the church is linked to the name of Monsignor Ennio Francia (1904/1995), personality of great culture, who in 1953 made ​​it the seat of the Mass of Artists, which he established in 1941. The celebration of Sunday Mass, which has involved many famous representatives of the art world, has over time given the church a second denomination, Church of the Artists, which recalls and perpetuates the successful collaboration of the art historian Giulio Carlo Argan, of the artists of the School of Piazza del Popolo, of musicians such as Goffredo Petrassi. The enlightened project had the merit of making this place a sacred space open to discussion and dialogue, creating an unusual but fruitful relationship with creativity and culture. The ellipsis of the layout, which circumscribes the sacred space, suggests the idea of the universe in motion, which radiates into the city through the streets that branch off from it” (Web site of the Church of the Artists - www.chiesadegliartisti.it)
BELL TOWER
1758/61 Girolamo Theodoli (1677/1766)

UPPER PART OF THE FAÇADE
“Eight statues of Carmelite nuns” by various artists including Lazzaro Morelli (1608/90), G.B. De Rossi and Filippo Carcani (active 1670/91)
At the center of the floor “Large coat of arms of the Gastaldi family” 1678 by Carlo Rainaldi

1st RIGHT - CHAPEL OF THE MOST HOLY CRUCIFIX
1677 Alessandro Cessani, stuccos by Pietro Papaleo (1640/1740)
Ovals “David with the Head of Goliath” and “Judith with the Head of Holofernes” 1822 by Ferdinando Cavalleri (1794/1867) from Turin
On the right “Prophet Hague with the wife of Jeroboam” and on the left “History of Tobit” 1822 by Ludovico Venuti (1785/1872) Cortona
“Altar frontal” with precious marbles

2nd RIGHT - CHAPEL OF THE SOULS IN PURGATORY
On the altar “Supper at Emmaus” 1981 by Riccardo Tommasi Ferroni (1934/2000)
“This work was inspired by the idea that Jesus is renewed in time and in every time, which is why the artist is representing Jesus with ancient clothes, the man standing with seventeenth-century clothes and the apostles with modern clothes, while in a basket under the table rests the dog of the artist himself. This is the symbolic meaning that Ferroni wants to suggest, that is, Jesus is always present in our daily lives” (Interactive Web Site Rome - www.romainteractive.com)
Vault with “Purgatory” by an unknown artist
On the right “St. Gregory in prayer” and on the left “Sts. Albert and Lawrence” 1907 by Silvio Galimberti (1869/1956)

3rd RIGHT - CHAPEL OF St. ANNA
1679 Francesco Carlo Bizzaccheri (1655/1721), a pupil of Carlo Fontana
Above the altar “Sacred Conversation”
Frescoes in the vault “Eternal Father in glory”, lunettes “Angel Appearing to Joachim” and “Meeting of Joachim and Anna” all works by Niccolò Berrettoni (1637/82)
This was the last work of the most important pupil of Carlo Maratta, who died 45-year-old soon after painting it
“Putti” in marble by Pietro Paolo Naldini (1619/91)

1676/79 Mattia De Rossi (1637/95)
“Virgin Mary of Montesanto” of the sixteenth century. The church is dedicated to her
“Angels” on the altar and “Sculptural group with angels holding the Gastaldi coat of arms” in stucco above the triumphal arch by Filippo Carcani (active 1670/91) who also sculpted the four statues of the “Sts. Angel, Alberto, Elisha and Elijah” that are in the niches of the dome

TO THE SIDES OF THE MAIN ALTAR
Four painted terracotta busts:
On the right “Alexander VII Chigi (1655/67)” and “Clement X Altieri (1670/76)”
On the left “Clement IX Rospigliosi (1667/69)” and “Urban VIII Barberini (1623/44)”
They are copies that replaced the bronze originals by Girolamo Lucenti (?/1698) except that of Urban VIII (Lucenti had sculpted a bust of Innocent XI Odescalchi - 1676/89) which is a copy of an original by Gian Lorenzo Bernini now in the Louvre

3rd LEFT - CHAPEL OF Sts. FRANCIS AND JAMES
1687 Tommaso Mattei (1652/1726), a pupil of Carlo Fontana
It belongs to the Montioni family
Above the altar “Virgin Mary and Child with Sts. Francis and James the Great” 1687 by Carlo Maratta (1625/1713) for the wealthy banker Francesco Montioni
“The Sixties of the seventeenth century opened and closed with the disappearance of two rulers of the pictorial context of Rome, as well as the leaders of the main and opposing stylistic tendencies of the time, the 'classical' (which favored groups of few figures, sitting in balanced, studied poses) and 'baroque' (which favored conspicuous masses of figures in distinctly dynamic attitudes): Andrea Sacchi, who died in 1661, and Pietro da Cortona, who died in 1669. At this juncture of epochal transition, Maratta was the only one who proved to be suitable - in terms of personality, taste, capability and professional reliability - to fill in the vacant leadership, and to keep it more and more firmly in the decades to follow, placing himself at the head of a firm not less efficient than extensive, which would have formed some of the most able professionals of the Roman scene of the late seventeenth and of early decades of the eighteenth centuries (Giuseppe Chiari, Niccolò Berrettoni, Giacinto Calandrucci, Andrea Procaccini, Agostino Masucci, Giuseppe Passeri)” (Luca Bortolotti - Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Treccani)
On the right “Christ Blessing with the Virgin Mary appearing to St. Francis” by Luigi Garzi (1638/1721), a pupil of Andrea Sacchi and later influenced by Carlo Maratta
On the left “Charity of St. James” 1688 by Daniele Seiter (1649/1705)
In the vault “Glory of the Virgin Mary” 1687 by Giuseppe Chiari (1654/1727), pupil of Carlo Maratta

About 1677 Carlo Rainaldi
Above the altar “Virgin Mary hands the veil to St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi” represented for the first time after the canonization of 1669
On the right of the “Communion of St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi”, on the left “Apparition of St. Augustine to St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi”
Vault “Christ in Glory” 1680/85 all works by Ludovico Gimignani (1643/97)
Stuccos with “Angels and cherubs holding garlands” about 1680 maybe by Lazzaro Morelli and Filippo Carcani

1st LEFT - CHAPEL OF St. LUCIA
Above the altar “St. Lucia” by an artist of the Roman school of the end of the seventeenth century
“Sepulchral monuments of the Palombi family” mid nineteenth century

1678, restored in the second decade of the nineteenth century
Vault “Glory of Angels with instruments of the Passion” end of the seventeenth century by an artist of the school of G.B. Gaulli aka Baciccio
Above the altar “Deposition” about 1720 by Biagio Puccini (1673/1721), one of his last works

ROOM NEAR THE SACRISTY
Frescoes “Dove of the Holy Spirit and glory of angels with the instruments of the Passion” 1691/92 by G.B. Gaulli aka Baciccio (1639/1709)
On the altar “Deposition” copy made in about 1690 by Giuseppe Chiari (1654/1727) from the original by Annibale Carracci now in Naples

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