Continued successes and the murder of Tomassoni
- Byname of:
- Michelangelo Merisi
- Born:
- September 29, 1571, Milan or Caravaggio [Italy]
- Died:
- July 18/19, 1610, Porto Ercole, Tuscany
- Also Known As:
- Michelangelo Merisi
- Movement / Style:
- Baroque art and architecture
- realism
- tenebrism
- On the Web:
- The Guardian - Who killed Caravaggio and why? His final paintings may hold the key (Oct. 29, 2024)
Caravaggio continued to work at secular commissions during that period, painting a highly erotic depiction of Cupid surrounded by the tumbled attributes of science, art, music, and military might, entitled Amor Vincit Omnia. He painted the celebration of the power of love for the Roman nobleman Vincenzo Giustiniani, possibly to mark a wedding, and it was displayed in pride of place in Giustiniani’s palace behind a green curtain. The model for it was Caravaggio’s studio assistant, Cecco Boneri, and the picture would later occasion rumours that Caravaggio and Cecco had slept together. An Englishman visiting Rome about 1650, Richard Symonds, was told the story by a custodian who took him around the Giustiniani Palace. Whether the rumours were true or not, it would be a mistake to regard Caravaggio as homosexual in any modern sense of the term. The balance of evidence suggests that he did have sexual relationships with men as well as women, but it could be argued that his amorous or sexual preferences were defined by his conspicuous reluctance to settle with any one partner.
The esteem in which Giustiniani held Omnia Vincit Amor provoked the jealousy of Giovanni Baglione, a rival painter who would later write a remarkably evenhanded (albeit sometimes acerbic) account of Caravaggio’s life. In 1602 Baglione publically exhibited a parody of the work titled Divine Love, which he later followed with a second version in which Caravaggio himself is depicted in the guise of the devil plotting to sodomize a furtive figure of Cupid. This visual accusation of sodomy provoked Caravaggio and his friends, including Gentileschi, to compose a set of satiric verses mocking Baglione as Giovanni Coglione (“Johnny Bollocks”) in no uncertain terms. In late summer 1603 Baglione had Caravaggio and Gentileschi thrown into prison on charges of criminal libel, which potentially carried a sentence of life rowing in the papal galleys. The subsequent trial, for which full transcripts survive in the Roman archive, elicited from Caravaggio his only known statement on the art of painting, a single frustratingly terse sentence: “In painting a valent’huomo [man of worth] is one who knows how to paint well and imitate natural objects well.” Probably with the help of Cardinal del Monte, Caravaggio and his coaccused were released from prison on September 25, 1603, and all charges against them were dropped.
After the libel trial Caravaggio traveled to Loreto, Italy, to research a large altarpiece on the subject of the Madonna of Loreto. He returned to Rome around the start of 1604 and, at about the same time, moved into rented accommodation in the Vicolo dei Santa Cecilia e Biagio (now the Vicolo del Divino Amore). Between 1603 and 1606 he would receive only a handful of commissions for large-scale public religious paintings, a fact suggestive of the extent to which his style was out of tune with the times. At the same time, his appearances in court for various disturbances of the peace multiplied. In 1604 he was arrested, variously, for assaulting a waiter who had served him with a plate of artichokes dressed in butter rather than oil; for throwing stones in the street in the company of, among others, a perfume maker and some prostitutes; and for telling a policeman who was attempting to release him quietly, even though he was carrying a sword and dagger, that “you can stick it up your arse.” In between committing those crimes and misdemeanours, he painted the austere and monumental altarpiece of The Entombment of Christ for the Oratorian church of Santa Maria in Vallicella, in Rome.
The pattern continued into 1605. In early summer he completed his altarpiece of The Madonna of Loreto, popularly known as “The Madonna of the Pilgrims,” for the Cavalletti Chapel in the Roman church of Sant’Agostino. The sweetest and most overtly sentimental of his major religious pictures, it was greeted with such enthusiasm by the mass of Rome’s pilgrims who gathered to see it that Giovanni Baglione compared the sound of their collective approbation to “the cackling of geese.” But in late May of that same year, Caravaggio was arrested again for carrying his sword and dagger in a public place. On July 19 he was arrested once more, this time for defacing the house front of a woman named Laura della Vecchia, a crime known as deturpatio, often committed as revenge for an insult or affront. Just 10 days later he was arrested yet again for inflicting grievous bodily harm. Caravaggio skipped bail and fled to the coastal city of Genoa for the month of August. On his return he discovered that the landlady from whom he was renting his house in the Vicolo dei Santa Cecilia e Biagio, one Prudentia Bruni, had seized his possessions and changed the locks. He committed the crime of deturpatio against her, this time smearing excrement on the door of her house and singing obscene songs to the accompaniment of a guitar outside her window. In her deposition to the court, the landlady complained that Caravaggio had damaged one of the ceilings in her house, a detail that may suggest one of the practicalities of his working method.
At the end of 1605, Caravaggio signed a contract to paint an altarpiece for the chapel of the papal grooms in St. Peter’s. He completed the work, The Madonna of the Palafrenieri, sometimes known as “The Madonna of the Serpent,” on April 8, 1606. Not more than a month later, it was removed from view because, according to Bellori, it was considered “offensive.” The precise cause of offence remains unknown, but the church fathers may have been disturbed by the emphatically generous bosom of the Virgin who treads on the viper, Satan, with her son Jesus as the grooms’ patron saint, Anne, looks on; or they may have learned (perhaps tipped off by one of the painter’s rivals) that she had been modeled by a known prostitute. Shortly afterward Caravaggio completed the last of his great altarpieces for Roman churches, The Death of the Virgin. Austere, solemn, tragic in its very mundanity, the work shows the Apostles lamenting the death of Mary in the poorest of homes. In the words of the 20th-century art historian Roberto Longhi, it resembles “a death in a night refuge.” It is among the most-powerful and moving of Caravaggio’s paintings, but once more, not long after being installed in the Carmelite church for which it had been commissioned, Santa Maria della Scala, it was removed from public view. To judge by the painting commissioned to replace it, an altarpiece by Carlo Saraceni on the same theme but infinitely more decorous in effect, Caravaggio had been censored for daring to place such strident and shocking emphasis on the poverty of Mary and the Apostles.
Shortly after that setback, on the evening of May 28, 1606, the long-smouldering animosity between Ranuccio Tomassoni and Caravaggio flared up into a formal duel, which took place on the tennis court of the French ambassador to Rome. Caravaggio pierced his opponent’s femoral artery with his dueling sword, causing him to bleed to death in a very short time. The nature of the injury, close to Tomassoni’s groin, may suggest that Caravaggio intended to wound his opponent sexually. Wounds were meaningful in the honour culture of the time, so, for example, a facial wound might be inflicted to avenge an insult to reputation, or loss of face, while a genital wounding or attempted castration might mark a dispute over a woman. Caravaggio and Tomassoni may still have been competing over Fillide Melandroni, or perhaps they had argued over Tomassoni’s wife—the presence of Tomassoni’s two brothers-in-law as seconds gives some credence to the latter hypothesis. Whatever the cause, the killing would have a profound effect on the rest of Caravaggio’s life. He fled Rome in its immediate aftermath. Duels themselves were against the law, and thus committing murder during a duel was a grievous offense. He was convicted in absentia of murder and made subject to a bando capitale, a capital sentence, which meant that anyone in the Papal States had the right to kill him with impunity in exchange for a reward. If they were unable to produce his body, his severed head would suffice.