
A Year: Day to Day Men: 8th of May
Catching the Last of the Rays
May 8, 1639 was the birthdate of Giovanni Battista Gaulli, the Italian artist of the High Baroque and early Rococo periods.
In mid-17th century, Gaulli’s Genoa was a cosmopolitan Italian artistic center open to both commercial and artistic enterprises from north European countries, including countries with non-Catholic populations such as England and the Dutch provinces. Painters such as Peter Paul Rubens and Anthony van Dyck stayed in Genoa for a few years. Gaulli’s earliest influences would have come from an eclectic mix of these foreign painters and other local artists including Valerio Castello and Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione.
The election of a new General of the Jesuit order, Gian Paolo Oliva, put into motion the artistic decoration of the Church of the Gesù, the mother church of the Society of Jesuits. With Gian Bernini’s support and his guidance thereafter, Oliva awarded the prestigious commission to the 22-year-old Giovanni Gaulli. The original contract stipulated the dome was to be completed in two years, and the remainder by the end of ten years. Gaulli’s main vault fresco was unveiled on Christmas Eve, 1679. After this, he continued frescoing of the vaults of the tribune and other areas in the church until 1685.
Gaulli’s nave masterpiece, the “Triumph of the Sacred Name of Jesus”, is an allegory of the work of the Jesuits that envelops worshippers or the observers below into the whirlwind of devotion. Swirling figures in the dark entry border of the composition frame the ‘open’ sky, ever rising upward toward a celestial vision of infinite depth. The light from Jesus’ name and symbol of the Jesuit order is gathered by patrons and saints above the clouds; while in the darkness below, a fusillade of brilliance scatters heretics, as if smitten by blasts of the Last Judgement. The great theatrical effect here, inspired and developed under his mentor Bernini, prompted critics to label Giovanni Gaulli a “Bernini in paint”.
Gaulli’s frescoes were a tour-de-force in illusionary painting, depicting the church’s roof opening up above the viewer; and the panorama is viewed in true perspective when seen from below. Gaulli’s ceiling is a masterpiece of architectural illusionism, combining stuccoed and painted figures and architecture. Bernini’s pupil Antonio Raggi provided the stucco figures. From the nave floor, it is difficult to distinguish painted from stucco angels. The figural composition spill over the frame’s edges which only heightens the illusion of the faithful rising miraculously toward the light above.