Online Encyclopedia

SALVATOR ROSA (1615-1673)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 722 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

SALVATOR

ROSA (1615-1673)  ,
See also:
Italian painter of the Neapolitan school, was born in Arenella, in the outskirts of Naples, in 1615: the precise day is given as the loth of
See also:
June, and also as the 21st of
See also:
July . His
See also:
father, Vito Antonio de Rosa, a
See also:
land surveyor, was bent upon making the youth a lawyer, or else a priest, and sent him to study in the convent of the Somaschi fathers . Here Salvator began showing a turn for
See also:
art: he went in secret to his maternal
See also:
uncle Paolo
See also:
Greco to learn the practice of
See also:
painting, but soon found that Greco had little pictorial lore to impart, so he transferred himself to his own
See also:
brother-in-law Francesco Fracanzaro, a pupil of Ribera, and afterwards had some practice under Ribera himself . Above all he went to nature, frequenting the Neapolitan coast, and keeping his eyes open and his hand busy . At the age of seventeen he lost his father; the widow was
See also:
left unprovided for, with at least five children, and Salvator found himself immersed in a sea of troubles and perplexities, with nothing for the while to stem them except a buoyant and adventurous temperament . He obtained some instruction under the
See also:
battle-painter Aniello Falcone, but chiefly painted in solitude, haunting romantic and desolate spots, beaches, mountains, caverns, verdure-clad recesses . Hence he became in
See also:
process of time the initiator of romantic landscape, with a
See also:
special turn for scenes of strange or picturesque aspect—often turbulent and rugged, at times
See also:
grand, and with suggestions of the sublime . He picked up scanty doles when he could get them, and his early landscapes sold for a few pence to petty dealers . The first person to discover that Rosa's
See also:
work was not as trumpery as it was cheap was the painter Lanfranco, who bought some of the paintings, and advised the youth to go to Rome . Hither in 1635, at the age of twenty, Rosa betook himself; he studied with
See also:
enthusiasm, but, catching fever, he returned to Naples and Falcone, and for a while painted nothing but battlepieces, and these without exciting any attention . This class of work was succeeded by the landscape art peculiarly characteristic of him—wild scenes wildly peopled with shepherds, seamen or especially soldiers . He then revisited Rome, and was housed by Cardinal Brancaccio; this prelate being made bishop of
See also:
Viterbo, Rosa painted for the Chiesa della Morte a large and noticeable picture of the " Incredulity of Thomas "—the first work of sacred art which we find recorded from his hand .

At Viterbo he made acquaintance with a mediocre poet named

See also:
Abati, and was hence incited to try his own faculty in verse . He then returned to Naples . Here the monopolizing triumvirate—Ribera, Caracciolo and Corenzio —were still powerful . Rosa was as yet too obscure to suffer from their machinations; but, having painted a picture of " Tityus Torn by the
See also:
Vulture," which went to Rome and there produced a
See also:
great sensation, he found it politic to follow in the footsteps of his fame, and once more, in 1638, resought the papal city . Rosa was a man of facile and versatile genius, and had by this time several strings to his bow . It is said that, still keeping painting steadily in view as his real objective, he resolved to secure attention first as a musician, poet,
See also:
improvisatore and actor—his
See also:
mother-wit and broad Neapolitan dialect (which appears to have stuck to him through
See also:
life)
See also:
standing him power-fully in stead . In the carnival he masqued as Formica and Capitan Coviello, and bustled about Rome distributing satirical prescriptions for diseases of the
See also:
body and more particularly of the mind . As Formica he inveighed against the farcical comedies acted in the Trastevere under the direction of the celebrated Bernini . Some of the actors, in one of their performances, retaliated by insulting Rosa, but the public was with him, and he now enjoyed every form of success—social
See also:
prestige, abundant commissions and any amount of
See also:
money, which he was wont to throw about broadcast to the populace . In 1646 he returned to Naples, and is said to have taken an active
See also:
part in the insurrection of
See also:
Masaniello; certain it is that he sympathized with and admired the fisherman autocrat, for a passage in one of his satires proves this . His actual share in the insurrection is, however, dubious; it appears only in
See also:
recent narratives, and the same is the case with the well-known story that at one time he herded with a
See also:
band of brigands in the Abruzzi—an incident which cannot be conveniently dove-tailed into any of the known
See also:
dates of his career . As regards the popular revolt against
See also:
Spanish tyranny, it is alleged that Rosa, along with other painters—Coppola, Porpora, Domenico Gargiuolo, Dal Po, Masturzo, the two Vaccari and Cadogna—all under the captaincy of Aniello Falcone, formed the Compagnia della Morte, whose
See also:
mission it was to hunt up Spaniards in the streets and despatch them, not sparing even those who had sought some glace of religious asylum .

He painted a portrait of Masaniello—probably from

reminiscence rather than from life: indeed, it is said that he painted him several times over in less than life
See also:
size . On the approach of Don John of Austria the
See also:
blood-stained Compagnia dispersed, Rosa escaping or at any
See also:
rate returning to Rome . Here he painted some important subjects, showing the uncommon bent of his mind as it passed from landscape into history—"
See also:
Democritus amid Tombs," the --
See also:
Death of
See also:
Socrates," " Regulus in the Spiked Cask " (these two are now in England), " Justice Quitting the Earth," and the " Wheel of Fortune." This last work, the tendency of which was bitingly satirical, raised a storm of ire and remonstrance . Rosa, endeavouring at conciliation, published a description of its meaning (probably softened down not a little from the real facts); none the less an order for his imprisonment was issued, but ultimately withheld at the instance of some powerful friends . It was about this time that Rosa wrote his satire named Babylon, under which name Rome was of course indicated . Cardinal Giancarlo de' Medici now invited the painter to leave Rome—which had indeed become too hot to hold him—for Florence . Salvator gladly assented, and remained in the Tuscan capital for the better part of nine years, introducing there the new style of landscape; he had no pupils, but various imitators . Lorenzo
See also:
Lippi the painter poet, and other beaux esprits shared with Rosa the hospitalities of the cardinal, and they formed an academy named I Percossi (the Stricken), indulging in a
See also:
deal of ingenious jollity—Rosa being alike applauded as painter,, poet and musician . His chief intimate at this time was Lippi, whom he encouraged to proceed with the poem Il Malmantile Racquistato . He was well acquainted also with Ugo and Giulio Maffei, and housed with them more than once in Volterra, where he wrote other four satires—Music,
See also:
Poetry, Painting and War . About the same time he painted his own portrait, now in the Uffizi Gallery of Florence . Finally he reverted once more to Rome, and hardly left that city again .

Much enmity still brooded there against him, taking the form more especially of an allegation that the satires which he zealously read and diffused in MS. were not his own

production, but filched from some one else . Rosa indignantly repelled this charge, which remains indeed quite unsubstantiated, although it is true that the satires deal so extensively and with such ready manipulation in classical names, allusions and anecdotes, that one is rather at a loss to fix upon the period of his busy career at which Rosa could possibly have imbued his mind with such a multitude of semi-erudite details . It may perhaps be legitimate to suppose that his
See also:
literary friends in Florence and Volterra had coached him up to a large extent-the satires, as compositions, remaining none the less strictly and fully his own . To confute his detractors he now wrote the last of the series, entitled Envy . Among the pictures of his closing years were the admired " Battlepiece " now in the Louvre, painted in the short space of
See also:
forty days, full of long-
See also:
drawn carnage, with
See also:
ships burning in the offing; " Pythagoras and the Fishermen; " the " Oath of Catiline " (Pitti Gallery); and the very celebrated Saul and the
See also:
Witch of
See also:
Endor " (Louvre), which is almost his latest work . He undertook a series of satirical portraits, to be closed by one of himself; but while occupied with this project he was assailed by dropsy, which, after lasting fully
See also:
half a
See also:
year, brought his life to a close on the 15th of March 1673 . In his last moments he married a Florentine named Lucrezia, who kept his house and had borne him two sons, one of them surviving him, and he died in a
See also:
con-trite
See also:
frame of mind . He lies buried in the Chiesa degli Angeli, where a portrait of him has been set up . Salvator Rosa, after the hard struggles of his early youth, had always been a successful man, and he left a handsome fortune . Rosa was indisputably a great leader in that
See also:
modern tendency of
See also:
fine art towards the romantic and picturesque which, developing in various directions and by diversified processes, has at last almost totally differentiated modern from olden art . He saw appearances with a new eye, and presented new images of them on his canvases, and deserves therefore all the credit due to a vigorous innovator, even if we contest the absolute value of his product . He himself courted reputation for his
See also:
historical
See also:
works, laying comparatively little stress on his landscapes; in portraits he was forcible .

In

chiaroscuro he is
See also:
simple and effective; his design has energy and a certain grandeur, without any high type of form or any
See also:
superior measure of correctness . His colour is too constantly of a sandy or yellowish-grey tone . Personally he was a man of high spirit, and he sold his pictures at large prices, more (it is said) to assert the honour of his art than from love of money; rather than sell them cheap. he destroyed them . In his later Florentine period he etched several of his works, subjects of
See also:
mythology, soldiering, &c . He was choleric, but kind and generous . Though a man of gaiety and pleasure, and a jovial boon companion, he does not appear to have been vicious in any serious degree . He was talkative, very sharp-tongued and an unblushing encomiast of his own performances . Among his pictures not already mentioned we may name, in the
See also:
National Gallery,
See also:
London, " Mercury and the Dishonest Woodman," and three others; in l aynham Hall, " Belisarius "; in the Grosvenor Gallery, "
See also:
Diogenes " ; in the Pitti Gallery, a grand portrait of a man in armour, and the " Temptation of St Anthony," which contains his own portrait . This last subject appears also in St
See also:
Petersburg, and in the Berlin Gallery . The satires of Salvator Rosa deserve more attention than they have generally received . There are, however, two recent books taking account of them—by Cesareo, 1892, and Cartelli, 1899 . The satires, though considerably spread abroad during his lifetime, were not published until 1719 .

They are all in terza rima, written without much literary correctness, but remarkably spirited, pointed and even brilliant . They are slashingly denunciatory, and from this point of view too monotonous in treatment . Rosa here appears as a very severe castigator of all ranks and conditions of men, not sparing the highest, and as a

champion of the poor and down-trodden, and of moral virtue and Catholic faith . It seems odd that a man who took so
See also:
free a part in the pleasures and diversions of life should be so ruthless to the ministers of these . The satire on
See also:
Music exposes the insolence and profligacy of musicians, and the shame of courts and churches in encouraging them . Poetry dwells on the pedantry, imitativeness, adulation, affectation and indecency of poets—also their poverty, and the neglect with which they were treated; and there is a very vigorous sortie against oppressive
See also:
governors and aristocrats . Tasso's glory is upheld;
See also:
Dante is spoken of as obsolete, and Ariosto as corrupting . Painting inveighs against the pictorial treatment of squalid subjects, such as beggars (though Rosa must surely himself have been partly responsible for this misdirection of the art), against the ignorance and lewdness of painters, and their tricks of trade, and the
See also:
gross indecorum of painting sprawling half-naked saints of both sexes . War (which contains the eulogy of Masaniello) derides the folly of hireling soldiers, who fight and perish while kings stay at home; the vile morals of kings and lords,
See also:
heresy and unbelief also come in for a flagellation . In Babylon Rosa represents himself as a fisherman, Tirreno, constantly unlucky in his
See also:
net-hauls on the Euphrates; he converses with a native of the country, Ergasto . Babylon (Rome) is very severely treated, and Naples much the same . Envy (the last of the satires, and generally accounted the best, although without strong apparent reason) represents Rosa dreaming that, as he is about to inscribe in all modesty his name upon the
See also:
threshold of the temple of glory, the goddess or fiend of Envy obstructs him, and a long interchange of reciprocal objurgations ensues .

Here occurs the highly charged portrait of the chief

See also:
Roman detractor of Salvator (we are not aware that he has ever been identified by name) ; and the painter protests that he would never condescend to do any of the lascivious work in painting so shamefully in vogue . As authorities for the life of Salvator Rosa, Passeri, Vite de' Pittori, may be consulted, and Salvini, Satire e Vita di Salvator Rosa; also Baldinucci and Dominici . The Life by Lady Morgan is a romantic treatment, mingling tradition or mere fiction with fact . The novel, A
See also:
Company of Death, by Albert Cotton, 1904, gives an interesting picture of Salvator Rosa at Naples . (W . M .

End of Article: SALVATOR ROSA (1615-1673)
[back]
MONTE ROSA
[next]
ROSACEAE

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.