Caravaggista
Menu
  • Home
  • Start Here
  • About
  • Resources
    • What to expect from your first art history course.
    • Applying to graduate school in art history.
  • Q & A
An Adventure in Art History, 2010 - 2018
Browse: Home » Caravaggio

Happy Birthday, Caravaggio!

September 29, 2013 · by Amy · in Art History, Caravaggio, Essay, Explorations, History

Happy birthday Caravaggio!  This year’s collection of images celebrating his birth are some of his self-portraits. The most moving of these, for me, are the ones where he inserts himself into the narrative: as a witness (fleeing) from Matthew’s martyrdom,…

Caravaggio’s Madonna of the Rosary

August 19, 2013 · by Amy · in Art History, Caravaggio, Collaboration, Education, Essay, History, Religious History, Rosary Project, Sacred Art

James from Amor Sciendi and I collaborated on his latest video, “The Madonna of the Rosary and the Counter Reformation.” You can watch the video below and read the article for more information. Please visit the Amor Sciendi YouTube channel…

A Quiet Holiness: Caravaggio’s Madonna di Loreto

August 5, 2013 · by Amy · in Art History, Caravaggio, Explorations, Sacred Art, Series

Gentle, sensuous, tender, human. These are just a few of the words that describe Caravaggio’s depictions of the Virgin Mary. His Marian works rarely, if ever, reflect the same vibrant optimism seen in his peers’ paintings of the Virgin.1 Rather, glorification of the…

Caravaggio’s Bodies & Shadows at LACMA

February 8, 2013 · by Amy · in Art, Art History, Caravaggio

LACMA’s recent exhibition Bodies & Shadows: Caravaggio and his Legacy (November 11, 2012 – February 10, 2013) is admittedly not the first U.S. show to bring together works by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio and artists who emulated his style. 2010…

Happy Birthday, Caravaggio!

September 29, 2012 · by Amy · in Caravaggio

It’s that special day again, Caravaggio’s birthday. In last year’s birthday post, I asked my readers to weigh in about Caravaggio’s art, went over a brief biography of his life  (and some of the things his biographers and critics said…

Skepticism Surrounding Caravaggio Discovery

July 6, 2012 · by Amy · in Academia, Art History, Caravaggio, News, Shorts

Yesterday,  the art world exploded with news that 100 new Caravaggio paintings and drawings had been discovered by a team of art historians in Milan at the Sforzesco Castle. The Castle is home to a collection of works from the…

Caravaggio the Leader

May 25, 2012 · by Amy · in Academia, Art History, Caravaggio, Explorations, Sacred Art

In her biography of Caravaggio, Helen Langdon refers to Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio’s “evangelical call to young artists,”1 welcoming and encouraging them to pursue his new and modern style. Historical documents paint a different picture, of a Caravaggio who fiercely guarded…

Vengeful Seductress: Judith

November 30, 2011 · by Amy · in Art, Art History, Caravaggio, Explorations, Religious History, Series

I’m so excited about this post. Since it obviously can’t be book or even research paper length, I have to warn you that it will not do justice to the topics it addresses (Artemisia Gentileschi, Caravaggio, Caravaggisti, Judith, Judith Slaying…

Dancing Seductress: Salome

November 18, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Art Theory, Caravaggio, Explorations, Series

Salome is one of many “bad girls” in art history. The step-daughter of King Herod, she was partially responsible for killing John the Baptist. You can read the full story in Mark 6:14-30. Herod was hesitant to kill John, for…

Happy 440th Birthday, Caravaggio!

September 29, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Caravaggio, History

Happy Birthday, Caravaggio! You’ve had a great year. People all over the world, especially Italy, celebrated the 400th anniversary of your death on July 18, 1610. Exhibits displaying your masterpieces sprung up internationally, a couple new books about your life…

1 2 Next →

What to Expect From Your First Art History Course


Click here to download this guide for free.

Applying to Graduate School

Click here to download this guide for free.

Currently Reading

The Collector of Lives: Giorgio Vasari and the Invention of Art
Noah Charney and Ingrid Rowland
W. W. Norton & Company (2017)

Wise Words

"In every group of travelers, every bunch of tourists in a bus, there is at least one man who insists on pointing out to the others the beauty or interest of things they encounter, even though the others can see the things, too: we are that man, I am afraid, au fond."
— Michael Baxandall

Connect on the Web

   

Copyright © 2025 Caravaggista

Powered by WordPress and Origin