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Giovanni Bellini and the Creation of Venetian Identity Brontë Hebdon Art 320: David Amott November 15th, 2012 Giovanni Bellini, The Doge Leonardo Loredan c. 1501 1 A Renaissance identity, individual and collective, was often based in humanist thought, particularly on the collective Roman past as displayed in writings by Cicero and Horace. Humanist thought, and thus humanist identity permeated through each city a little differently. In Florence, the humanist paradigm thrived in the republican climate, whereas, in other duchies, humanism might not have precipitated through every level of society. Venice at the end of the 15th century would have fallen under this second category. Once the second largest republic next to Florence,1 Venice became increasingly under the rule of a council of Doges. All social mobility became close to impossible and humanism as a whole never reached beyond the newly founded aristocracy. This social change was written intrinsically into the artistic culture of Venice, particularly in the work of Giovanni Bellini. He accurately articulates the ways in which identity was created in relation to the city, the individual and the artist amid the social changes occurring in early 16th century Venice. In Venetian portraiture, rarely if ever have all three identities been visible in the same work, and even more rarely have they been analyzed. In the Portrait of Doge Leonardo Loredan, these three identities are exhibited in a harmonious way and work together to create a social background to the portrait that truthfully shows the social climate of Venice at the time of Bellini. Venice was a unique city for more than just its government and social construction. The city was founded by people running from the chaos that ensued after the fall of Rome.2 Built seemingly on sheer force of will, the city floats on a system of logs driven deep into the earth, which though difficult to conceive, actually was the ideal location for a port city. Venice during the crusades, and the many 1 2 Laurie Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, (Boulder Laurence King Publishing, 200) 270-289. Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, 270. 2 pilgrimages made into Italy throughout the middle ages and into the Renaissance, served as an excellent harbor for bringing money into the country, especially through its grain and salt trade.3 That money certainly helped facilitate the Renaissance as a whole but it did something perhaps more profound to Venice itself; it forced them to focus on the East. The cross-cultural influences coming into the city from the sea were particularly strongest with its biggest trade partner Byzantium.4 Thus the Venetian identity was a highly unique mix of outside influences when compared to the other Italian city-states. It was a city forging its own identity by looking outward for examples, rather than inward to Italy for an identity. Bellini’s Doge formally shows the overpowering identity of the city specifically through the clothing and demeanor of the Doge Loredan. Today these two formal qualities show how “the secular government of Venice was the only Italian government system that could rival the church as a creator of culture.”5 The government did play an active part in culture, particularly in the glorifying of the Venetian state, sometimes at the cost of the individual.6 Traditionally, hierarchy of scale was employed by artists to denote the relative importance of people in comparison to the city.7 The city would loom large in the frame, whereas the figures themselves would be small. In this way, Venetian artists such as the Bellinis communicated the importance of Venice in relation to the city’s inhabitants; a citizen was obviously less important than the city in which he lived.8 In Loredan’s portrait, the city might not physically be there, but formal clues allude to its presence. The Doge is wearing his ceremonial robes of 3 Gustav Pauli, Famous Art Cities Volume 2:Venice, (London: H. Grevel &Co., 1904), 6-105. Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 6. 5 Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 102. 6 Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 105. 7 Laurie Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, (Boulder Laurence King Publishing, 200) 270-289. 8 Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, 278. 4 3 thick, ornate brocade with large metallic buttons as well as the corno with a linen cap underneath which was a horn shaped ducal hat.9 These ducal robes would have been a symbol of Venetian government and order, as well as an indicator of the wealth of the city. The portrait of Loredan becomes then, not a portrait of a human being, but a secular image of the power and wealth of the state government. The government had enough influence to rival even the church, and Bellini’s portrait makes that particularly clear through his use of clothing. Loredan’s demeanor and positioning is also indicative of the strain the Venetian identity was under at the time Bellini painted Leonardo Loredan. For all intensive purposes, the Venetian identity was under attack. Doge Tommaso Mocenigo had died in 1423 and left Venice in relative prosperity.10 The population was flourishing and the economy was stable. However, the next Doge, Francesco Foscari, unintentionally sounded the death toll for Venice. Venice had always been a territorially self-conscious city.11 Its location placed the Venetian people neither on land, nor on water so the Venetian people were constantly trying to solidify their position. This was done mostly through the acquisition of territories. Thus, Doge Francesco Foscari’s decision to go to war with Milan was a natural way to stabilize his new career as Doge. The unforeseen effects were disastrous. The city spent an unnecessary amount of money on the unsuccessful war right as Byzantium fell to the Ottomans in 1453. They were suddenly without any money for defense, and the buffer zone between them and the Ottoman Turks had just fallen. Their sudden exposure to the Turks left them anxious to make allies with bigger powers than themselves, 9 Miranda Mowbray, Electing the Doges of Venice: a 13th century Protocol, (Bristol: Enterprise Systems and Storage Laboratory, 2007), 1-15. 10 Gustav Pauli, Famous Art Cities Volume 2:Venice, (London: H. Grevel &Co., 1904), 6-105. 11 Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 12. 4 which led them to ally with the French in 1499 against Naples. Their anxiety proved to be the final blow. They had aligned themselves too quickly with a power they did not fully understand. Their alliance broke apart and they were defeated fully in 1509.12 The consequences of Doge Foscari’s actions were dealt with during the rule of Doge Loredan from 1501-1521.13 Painted at the literal beginning of his career as Doge, his expression communicates the need for reassurance; both for his people and for himself. The Venetian people, who had no control or administrative insight into their government would likely not have known the full extent of their situation and would have looked to Loredan for protection and help. Loredan’s rod-straight back and powerful presence show Loredan as a figure who will fight for Venice selflessly until the end. However, he is positioned behind what seems to be a wooden ledge, which communicates a certain distance and separation. By separating the figure from the viewer, Bellini reminds his viewers that they are not welcomed into the painting. This is directly transferrable to the barrier that was the Doge system in Venice. Because no more familial names could gain access to the Golden Book of the Council, a class system based on heredity created a barrier to social mobility and was thus enforced.14 Additionally, the barrier communicates the knowledge that Loredan was privy to what the people were not. There was a segregation of knowledge. Finally, the countenance of Loredan seems at first glance to be smiling, but upon closer examination, the viewer realizes a smile has been mistaken for a type of “resigned neutrality.”15 It communicates “the man’s subordination to ideals of civic and religious harmony.”16 In this way, Bellini formally communicates how the identity of Venice as a whole was vastly more important than the identity of its individual citizens. 12 Gustav Pauli, Famous Art Cities Volume 2:Venice, (London: H. Grevel &Co., 1904), 6-105. Debra Pincus, “Venice and the Two Romes,” Artibus and Historiae,29, no.58, (2007), 101-114. 14 Laurie Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, (Boulder Laurence King Publishing, 200) 270-289. 15 Joanna Woods Marsden, Renaissance Self Portraiture, (London: Yale University Press, 1998), 117-119. 16 Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, 6. 13 5 Bellini does this by showing how Loredan has subordinated himself to his state. There is virtually nothing personal about Loredan. His clothes were assigned to him by his city, his position in society was assigned to him by his city and his very countenance was assigned to him by his city. This utter submission to the state goes beyond mere civic humanism. However, this begs the question of why such images of civic submission were necessary at all. Images like these were created to serve an essential social purpose through the display of rank and status in a visual way which created a sense of appearance that generated understanding.17 Through images like this, the public understood their own relationship to the city as well as their relationship to their rulers which ensured the continuation of the Doge aristocracy by perpetuating the notion of Roman Pietas. Pietas is the notion of esteeming the good of the group, city or community above the good of the individual.18 The prime example of Roman pietas is Aeneas in The Aeneid which was commissioned by Augustus as political propaganda in the early days of Imperial Rome. This idea that pervaded ancient Roman society would have been available to the Doges through Cicero and Virgil as propaganda for their city as well. Loredan’s portrait communicates this pietas perfectly. He is not an individual, he is a servant to his state. The individuality of Venice thus becomes more important than the individuality of the man and especially “Bellini’s presentation in these works reflects the city’s political system in which the individual was subjugated to the class, and the class to the needs of the state.”19 Pietas and civic submission are both certainly present in the frame, but what about Loredan himself? Is this not a portrait? Bellini was the foremost portrait painter in Venice at the turn of the 16th century.20 17 Patricia Rubin, Images and Identity: 15th Century Florence, (London: Yale University Press, 2007), 3- 640. 18 Virgil, The Aeneid, (Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company, 2005), 1-340. Joanna Woods Marsden, Renaissance Self Portraiture, (London: Yale University Press, 1998), 117-119. 20 Debra Pincus, “Venice and the Two Romes,” Artibus and Historiae, 29, no.58, (2007), 101-114. 19 6 His amount of work in this one area of painting led him to begin focusing on the moods of the inner psyche in art. The idea that a portrait of the physical should create an image of the metaphysical self was novel.21 We can see Loredan’s inner psychology particularly in his eyes. He gazes outward, not at the viewer, but instead at something unseen and unknown. He seems almost lost in thought, as if he is pondering the weight of the task placed upon him. The simple fact is that very little is actually known about Doge Loredan. Little is known about his personal life, and aside from the happenings of 1509, we know little about his term as Doge. In Venice, but also late medieval Europe as a whole, identity was not as personal as we believe it to be today. Identity was created through families. Indeed, “individual behavior was not divorced from corporate of family roles. Moreover, it indicated how public and private realms, while distinct, were never really separate.”22 In this way, you were not Giacomo, you were not Leonardo. You were a Loredan and thus had certain ways of representation and action. This explains the mass amounts of effort taken to preserve and protect a family name. For example, a coat of arms was a way of physically preserving a family name. Doge Loredan was no exception to this creation of familial identity. In fact, during the political difficulties of 1509 Venetians saw him as being overly soft and too concerned for the continuation and safety of his family, rather than the city.23 He was criticized greatly for this, however, he was responding in quite a natural way. If his family was destroyed, his identity was gone. 21 22 Gustav Pauli, Famous Art Cities Volume 2: Venice, (London: H. Grevel &Co., 1904), 6-105. Patricia Rubin, Images and Identity: 15th Century Florence, (London: Yale University Press, 2007), 3- 640. 23 "Lorenzo Loredan Sculpture." Museum Planet, Boldfx Publishing, 1999. Web. Web. 18 Nov. 2012. <http://www.museumplanet.com/tour.php/venice/gp/15>. #15 7 Loredan’s familial identity was constantly balancing with his Venetian identity. Leonardo as “Loredan” and Leonardo as “Venetian” were two separate beings attempting to work together as Doge. The importance of his Venetian identity can be read easily in Bellini’s portrait. It was commissioned the first year of Loredan’s term as Doge which indicates a certain need to please.24 Loredan needed to prove to his city that he could be a good Doge and he does this formally by emphasizing his Venetian identity over his familial identity. He wears the Doge’s robes and has the countenance of a stern leader. However, the fact that Loredan protected his family over his city shows his individuality a bit more. Individuality might not mean the same thing today as it did in 1509, however, Loredan’s dual identity as “Venetian” and part of the Loredan family is understood through Bellini’s formal depiction as well as the history behind the defeat of Venice in 1509. Indeed, “there was never born nor never died a man in Venice.”25 In addition to the city’s identity and Loredan’s identity, a third identity is visible in The Portrait of Leonardo Loredan in the paper cartellino on the center bottom. A cartellino was a small painted paper with important information on it. In this case, the name Ioannes Bellinus [Giovanni Bellini] adorns the paper. The signature is in Latin, but with uppercase Roman characters which is characteristic of Bellini’s signature style.26 The second raised L has its roots in the “raised pedestal letter” which was common in early imperial Rome.27 This cancelleresca corsiva28 style of cursive was adopted by the Carolingian 24 "The Myth of Venice."History Teachers Association of Victoria, n.d. Web. 18 Nov 2012. <http://www.htav.asn.au/sitebuilder/students/knowledge/asset/files/17/renaissanceitaly_themythofvenice_sbell.pdf>. 25 “The Myth of Venice.” 26 Louisa C. Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence: Signatures in Venetian Renaissance Pictures,”Art Bulletin 80, no.4, (1998), 616-629. 27 Debra Pincus, “Giovanni Bellini's Humanist Signature,” Artibus and Historiae, 29, no.58, (2008)92-95, 28 Pincus, “Giovanni Bellini’s Humanist Signature,”99. 8 dynasties and eventually became popular among Italian humanists in the 15th century. The letters are evenly spaced and a small triangle is noticeable at the end of the last ‘s’ which is another identifier of a Bellini signature. Normally, signatures as a methodological device have been overlooked due to their lack of metaphysical background.29 However, Venetian signatures can prove the exception because of the amount that was produced and their standardization.30 The amount of signatures in Venice can be explained through their relationship with other trading cities. Just as most of their goods for survival came from the outside, they exported many goods which precipitated the return of goods and ideas to them.31 For example, the implementation of oil painting in Venice directly resulted from trading and interacting with the North.32 Venice as a port city also explains the standardization of the signature which can be attributed to the rise in competition.33 An artist had a unique identity in the renaissance paradigm. Like Loredan, an artist had the identity of his state as well as his familial identity, however, his craft was a third identity. Hovering somewhere between artist and artisan, an artist had an occupational identity that could have just as much impact in determining reception in society as familial and citizen identity. Bellini shows his artistic identity in his signature by being one of the most prolific and consistent signers of the Renaissance. Indeed, “Bellini’s workshop standardized its form of signature which helped market its reputation.”34 Additionally, as the 29 Gilbert Creighton, "A Preface to Signatures (with some cases in Venice)," in Fashioning Renaissance Identities, ed. Mary Rogers (Cambridge: University Press, 2000), 79-84. 30 . Louisa C. Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence: Signatures in Venetian Renaissance Pictures,”Art Bulletin 80, no.4, (1998), 616-629. 31 Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence,” 620. 32 Laurie Adams, Italian Renaissance Art, (Boulder Laurence King Publishing, 200) 270-289. 33 Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence,”627. 34 Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence,” 620. 9 best painter in Venice, Bellini’s workshop would have needed a way to both authenticate and guarantee his work, especially to clients abroad. In this way, his signature became his brand, which was widely recognized and mutually respected. Perhaps this is the reason why Bellini’s signature rarely changed and when it did, the changes were minute. A lack of date, the roman lettering and the small triangle at the end became a universal symbol understood as Bellini’s work.35 In this way, the signature became his identity. The act of signing is, in itself, a declaration of identity.36 Renaissance artists were emerging from a gothic tradition where the signature was a rare appendage to a work of art. Thoughts circulating as to why this was the case seem to revolve around the idea of giving due reverence to God, however the reality is that there is simply not enough works, signed or unsigned, to establish a viable reason. For example, renaissance signatures as a whole were found most often on devotional works.37 The fact that the Venetian signature became so standardized is direct evidence for the renaissance affirmation of identity. Aside from commercial motivation, Bellini had another reason to assert his identity into his works. In his large workshop, his two students, Titian and Giorgione were rapidly gaining ground against him. They were nipping at the heels of their master and Bellini recognized this. Understanding the fragility of his monopoly on the Venetian art world, he asserted his identity even further. This was done by, as Debra Pincus, “Giovanni Bellini's Humanist Signature,” Artibus and Historiae, 29, no.58, (2008)92-95, Louisa C. Matthew, “The Painter’s Presence: Signatures in Venetian Renaissance Pictures,”Art Bulletin 80, no.4, (1998), 616-629. 37 Patricia Rubin, "Signposts of Invention: Artist's Signatures in Italian Renaissance Art," Art History, 29, no. 4 (2006): 563-599. 35 36 10 mentioned above, the standardization of his signature, as well as his work towards being a progressive artist. He was the first Venetian to work in oils when they came from the north in the 1470’s.38 He was constantly changing and improving his individual style, especially in his landscapes.39 And he also embraced new subject matter. For example, he painted his first nude when he was 90 years old.40 Through this constant progression, Bellini insured the continual superiority of his name and brand. Albrect Dürer witnessed this when he said, “he is very old, but he is the best painter of them all.”41 A Renaissance identity was the product of many different influences. City, family and occupation were the biggest identity creators in Venice and this unique blend created the Venetian atmosphere necessary to facilitate the progression from Renaissance to Mannerism and beyond. Leonardo Loredan’s portrait is unique because it perfectly portrays all three identities formally, and through its history. It is a portrait of the state in that Loredan is wearing the countenance and clothes of his city, it is the portrait of a man in that we understand his desire to please both his family and his city, and it is also a portrait of the artist in that we see Bellini’s standard brand in his signature. This mix of city, self and brand was unique only in Venice. It took just the right amount of republicanism and Doge power, along with the familial identity, and sufficient exporting economic power requiring a standard label. Through understanding the Portrait of Lorenzo Loredan, we come to better understand Venice and what it meant to be living within its walls at the end of the 15th century. 38 Gustav Pauli, Famous Art Cities Volume 2:Venice, (London: H. Grevel &Co., 1904), 6-105. Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 102. 40 Pauli, Famous Art Cities, 105. 41 "Giovanni Bellini Biography," artble.com (blog), 2012. 39 11 Bibliography Adams, Laurie. Italian Renaissance Art. 1st Ed. 1. Boulder: Laurence King Publishing, 2001. 270289. Burke, Jill. "Patronage and Identity in Renaissance Florence: the case of S. Maria a Lecceto." Trans. Array Fashioning Identities in Renaissance Art. Mary Rogers. 1st Ed. Cambridge: University Press, 2000. 51-63. Print. Coates, Victoria C. "Ut Vita Sculptura: Cellini’s Perseus and the Self Fashioning of Artistic Identity." Trans. Array Fashioning Identities in Renaissance Art. Mary Rogers. 1st Ed. Cambridge: University Press, 2000. 150-153. Print. Creighton, Gilbert. “A Preface to signatures (with some cases in Venice)." Fashioning Renaissance Identities. Edited by Mary Rogers. Cambridge: University Press, 2000. Ketelaar, Eric. "The Genealogical Gaze: Family Identities and Family Archives in the Fourteenth to Seventeenth Centuries." Libraries & the Cultural Record 44.1 (2009): 9-28. Project MUSE. Web. 1 Nov. 2012. <http://muse.jhu.edu/>. Matthew, Louisa C. "The Painter’s Presence: Signatures in Venetian Renaissance Pictures." Art Bulletin. 80.4 (1998): 616. Print. Marsden, Joanna Woods. Renaissance Self Portraiture. London: Yale University Press, 1998. Mowbray, Miranda. Electing the Doges of Venice: a 13th century Proticol. Bristol: Entreprise Systems and Storage Laboratory, 2007. Pauli, Gustav (1866-1938); Konody, Paul G.(1872-1933). Venice. Famous art cities ; no.2. London: New York: H. Grevel, C. Scribner's sons, 1904. 12 Pincus, Debra. "Giovanni Bellini's Humanist Signature." Artibus and Historiae. 29. no. 58 (2008): 92-95. Pincus, Debra. "Venice and the Two Romes." Artibus and Historiae. 13.26 (1992): 101-114. Web. 1 Nov. 2012. Rubin, Patricia. Images and Identity: 15th Century Florence. 1st Ed. London: Yale University Press, 2007. 3-640. Print. Patricia , Rubin. "Signposts of Invention: Artist's Signatures in Italian Renaissance Art." Art History. 29. no. 4 (2006): 563-599. Rubin, Patricia. "‘What men saw’: Vasari’s Life of Leonardo and the image of the Renaissance artist.” Art History. 13, pp. 34-46 Tinagli, Paola. "The Identity of the Prince: Cosimo de’Medici, Giorgio Vasari and the Ragionamenti." Trans. Array Fashioning Identities in Renaissance Art. Mary Rogers. 1st Ed. Cambridge: University Press, 2000. 190-200. Print. Virgil, . The Aeneid. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company, 2005. "Giovanni Bellini Biography." artble.com (blog), "Lorenzo Loredan Sculpture." Museum Planet. Boldfx Publishing, 1999. Web. Web. 18 Nov. 2012. <http://www.museumplanet.com/tour.php/venice/gp/15>. "The Myth of Venice." . History Teachers Association of Victoria, n.d. Web. 18 Nov 2012. <http://www.htav.asn.au/sitebuilder/students/knowledge/asset/files/17/renaissanceitaly_themythofvenice _sbell.pdf>. 13