The Worcester Art Museum, in partnership with Clark University  and the College of the Holy Cross, will present the first major  exhibition outside of Europe to explore art’s role during the  plague.   “Hope and Healing: Painting in Italy in a Time of Plague,  1500-1800,” on view at the Worcester Art Museum April 3 to  September 25, comprises 37 works by baroque masters who worked in  Italy in the midst of plague.   Thirty museums and private collectors, here and abroad, have lent  works to this landmark exhibition. The greatest artists of the  time, including Tintoretto, Van Dyck, Canaletto, Mignard and  Sweerts, are represented.   For centuries, the bubonic plague stuck Europe with unpredictable  and disastrous frequency. With busy international ports, Italy,  in particular, suffered wave after wave of plague outbreaks from  the mid-Fourteenth to the early Eighteenth Century. The  theocratic society of early modern Italy believed plague was both  caused and cured by God and the church mandated penitential  measures, such as fasting, processions, charity and prayer to  heavenly intercessors, to end the scourge.   Art of the time served to remind viewers of spiritual remedies  for the plague. Devotional paintings provided a focus for  personal reflection and prayer. Painted allegories of charitable  works offered a model for action. Banners and large-scale  altarpieces functioned to plead for God’s mercy or to thank God  from releasing them from plague.   Subjects of the paintings range from grim portrayals of corpses  wrapped in shrouds to inspiring images of charity. Sweeping views  of Venice are contrasted with intimate scenes of caring for the  sick. Even those at a fashionable dinner party are touched by the  plague.   Angelo Caroselli’s “Plague at Ashdod,” a key work in the  exhibition, is a copy after Poussin’s painting of the same theme,  but it is more than a mere copy. Caroselli’s painting was  commissioned in 1630 by the Sicilian art collector Fabrizio  Valguarnera while Poussin’s version, also commissioned by  Valguarnera, was still underway. This painting is considered one  of Carselli’s finest works and it is one of the most  distinguished reminders of the plague of 1630 in Rome. The work  is on loan from the National Gallery, London.   From the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Giovanni  Battista Tiepolo’s “Saint Thecla Praying for the Plague-Stricken”  also commemorates the plague of 1630, one of the most virulent  outbreaks in early modern Italy. In Tiepolo’s modello, Saint  Thecla intercedes on behalf of the town of Este, depicted in the  background.   The exhibition also features Bernardo Strozzi’s full-length  modello for an altarpiece in Venice, from 1631-1636, depicting  Saint Sebastian. Divided in two fragments centuries ago, the  painting was recently reunited at the Museum of Fine Arts,  Boston. The painting both glorifies the martyrdom of Saint  Sebastian and promotes charity through the good work of Saint  Irene and her maid, who tend to his wounds.   “Hope and Healing: Painting in Italy in a Time of Plaque,  1500-1800” is curated by a multidisciplinary team of scholars:  Gauvin Alexander Bailey, associate professor of art history at  Clark University; Pamela M. Jones, associate professor of art  history at the University of Massachusetts, Boston; Franco  Mormando, associate professor of Italian studies at Boston  College; and Thomas Worcester, associate professor of history at  College of the Holy Cross.   A series of lectures and gallery talks, “Hope and Healing in  Context,” explores the historical, art historical, religious and  medical aspects of plague. Public, guided tours are offered in  April and May. For information, 508-799-4406 or  www.worcesterart.org.   Hours are Wednesday through Sunday, 11 am to 5 pm, Thursday,  11 am to 8 pm, and Saturday, 10 am to 3 pm. Admission is $8. The  museum is at 55 Salisbury Street.
 
    



 
						