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 » Explorations » Page 2

Heaven

January 31, 2012 · by Amy · in Art History, Explorations, Religious History, Sacred Art

In the sixteenth century and seventeenth centuries, the Catholic Church was engaged in an ideological war with (among others) Martin Luther, the young professor and preacher from the North. As his teachings spread across Europe, the Church needed a way…

Change, Literacy, and Electronics

January 5, 2012 · by Amy · in Education, Explorations, Life, Reading

I have a confession: over the weekend, I bought a Kindle … and I love it! I have long held the belief that e-readers and e-books will be the death of literacy or at the very least, the death of the…

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…

Sexy Seductress: Potiphar’s Wife

November 28, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Explorations, Series

The story of Joseph and Potiphar’s wife can be found in Genesis 39. At this point in Joseph’s story, he had been nearly killed and then sold into slavery by his brothers and had wound up in Egypt in Pharaoh’s,…

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…

Baroque Spain: Devotion on Canvas.

September 30, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Art Theory, Explorations, History

In 1622, Pope Gregory XV  began restoring and tightening Rome’s grip on the Church’s rightful and overwhelming influence in the world. (His successor, Urban VIII, continued his work and founded a missionary training college that would send messengers of the…

King David: Symbol of Perfection and Justice

September 21, 2011 · by Amy · in Art, Art History, Explorations, Sacred Art

Note: This is part two of my series on Renaissance and Baroque depictions of David. Part One of this series explored the story of King David and, despite his shortcomings, how he came to be a Renaissance hero. Not only…

It’s hard not to love Caravaggio.

September 8, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Caravaggio, Explorations, Sacred Art

What’s not to love about Caravaggio? He was talented, considerably wealthy, popular, and maintained a sultry bad-boy image. He created an in-demand artistic style that attracted the most powerful patrons in Rome and numerous followers. For all his merits, he…

King David: Hero, Sinner, Friend of God.

September 7, 2011 · by Amy · in Art History, Explorations, Religious History, Sacred Art

King David. When he was only a teenager, he was anointed by Israel’s prophet, Samuel, to be Israel’s next king. God needed to restore purity in his appointed earthly rulers after Saul defiled his divinely appointed post by disobeying God and taking…

A Haggardly Beautiful Mary Magdalene

September 6, 2011 · by Amy · in Art, Art History, Essay, Explorations, Religious History, Sacred Art, UCLA

This Mary Magdalene was sculpted by Donatello. Artistically and materialistically, the sculpture departs from his smooth bronze and marble work. Mary stands over 6′ tall, made of wood and gesso.  More than stone or marble, I believe the wood and…

← Previous 1 2 3 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