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Episode 276 - Caravaggio’s “Madonna of the Rosary”

19m · Rebuilding The Renaissance · 01 May 10:30

Painted in 1607 while Caravaggio was in Naples, Italy, trying to elude the long arm of papal law for the murder he committed in Rome, the “Madonna of the Rosary” is Caravaggio’s most standard Baroque painting. While the patron is unknown, curiously, the painting went up for sale a few months after being completed perhaps indicating an unsatisfied client.

The episode Episode 276 - Caravaggio’s “Madonna of the Rosary” from the podcast Rebuilding The Renaissance has a duration of 19:23. It was first published 01 May 10:30. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

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Episode 277 - Caravaggio’s “Sleeping Cupid”

Caravaggio, still a fugitive from justice, left Naples for Malta in the second half of 1607 most likely because the sensational paintings he produced in Naples were drawing too much attention to him. When he arrived in Malta, he was inducted into the brotherhood and apparently changed his ways. One of the paintings that he produced while in Malta was his beautiful “Sleeping Cupid,” (today in the Pitti Palace in Florence, Italy) which reminded its patron of his vow of chastity.

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