Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio (29 September 1571 – 18 July 1610) was
an Italian artist active in Rome, Naples, Malta and Sicily between 1593 and
1610. He is commonly placed in the Baroque school, of which he was the first
great representative.
Within his lifetime, Caravaggio was considered enigmatic, fascinating, a rebel,
and dangerous. He burst upon the Rome art scene in 1600, and thereafter never
lacked for commissions or patrons, yet handled his success atrociously. An early
published notice on him, dating from 1604 and describing his lifestyle some
three years previously, tells how "after a fortnight's work he will swagger
about for a month or two with a sword at his side and a servant following him,
from one ball-court to the next, ever ready to engage in a fight or an argument,
so that it is most awkward to get along with him."[1] In 1606 he killed a young
man in a brawl and fled from Rome with a price on his head. In Malta in 1608 he
was involved in another brawl, and yet another in Naples in 1609, possibly a
deliberate attempt on his life by unidentified enemies. By the next year, after
a career of little more than a decade, he was dead.
Huge new churches and palazzi were being built in Rome in the decades of the
late 16th and early 17th centuries, and paintings were needed to fill them. The
Counter-Reformation Church searched for authentic religious art with which to
counter the threat of Protestantism, and for this task the artificial
conventions of Mannerism, which had ruled art for almost a century, no longer
seemed adequate. Caravaggio's novelty was a radical naturalism which combined
close physical observation with a dramatic, even theatrical, approach to
chiaroscuro, the use of light and shadow. In Caravaggio's hands this new style
was the vehicle for authentic and moving spirituality.
Famous and extremely influential while he lived, Caravaggio was almost entirely
forgotten in the centuries after his death, and it was only in the 20th century
that his importance to the development of Western art was rediscovered. Yet
despite this his influence on the common style which eventually emerged from the
ruins of Mannerism, the new Baroque, was profound. Andre Berne-Joffroy, Paul
Valéry’s secretary, said of him: "What begins in the work of Caravaggio is,
quite simply, modern painting.