GIULIO DALVIT // Il Gran Teatro Montano. Saggi su Gaudenzio Ferrari Giovanni Testori; new edition Giovanni Agosti

Despite being the owner of the two Annunciation panels by Gaudenzio Ferrari now in the National Gallery, Sir Henry Layard addressed, in 1887, the statues at the Sacro Monte in Varallo as objects of wonder and admiration to innumerable pilgrims yet the bad taste of the colour and clothing make them highly repugnant to a cultivated eye an opinion he shared with Bernard Berenson, Walter Pater, Charles Eastlake and most Italian connoisseurs.[i]泭It was in response to such inveterate underestimations of Gaudenzios activity at the Sacro Monte to which two early exceptions are English books by Samuel Butler and Ethel Halsey , that Giovanni Testori in 1965 gathered five essays (two of which are unpublished) in his Gran Teatro Montano.[ii]泭In addition to the original text, this new edition includes essays by Testori from 1956 (the year of the monographic exhibition on Gaudenzio in Vercelli) to 1985, spanning the authors life-long interest in the painter.[iii]泭An introduction and an afterword by Giovanni Agosti frame the essays, analysing the books birth and legacy. In honour of their aesthetic value and innovative importance for the first edition, all the original images are included, to which a few are added. The importance of the illustrations is nonetheless scaled down by Testoris alluring writing style, evidenced in two previous reprints of the book, which lacked images.[iv]泭Such a style is indebted to both Roberto Longhi (whose Officina Ferrarese Testori read as an eleven-year-old-boy) and a Lombard lineage of expressionist writers such as Carlo Emilio Gadda, thus resulting in a linguistically laborious emotional critique as Testori himself defined it. This, combined with the very subject of the Sacro Monte, which is still relegated to an art-historical periphery, left the book overlooked on the international stage. Indeed, the book has perhaps represented an unyielding barrier for the up-to-then lively international scholarship on Ferrari. The intention to shift and expand the terms of the discussion on Gaudenzio as a sculptor and architect as he is referred to in the earliest sources is one of the books chief virtues and has stood the test of time. In this connection, stylistic critique is not separated from technical examination and Testoris uneven attributional whirlwind is occasionally sharp-eyed. However, among the main theses of the book is the view of Gaudenzio as the alleged director for the whole Sacro Monte which is however impeded by the account of a 1514 source, frequently bypassed by Testori.[v]泭Furthermore, the broad ambition of the book is clearly to structure a new image of Gaudenzio through the prism of his work at the Sacro Monte. This aim is, however, highly problematic. Not only does it overshadow the importance of Gaudenzios works elsewhere, but it also reshapes the image of the artist through his least documented phase where ideology is left room to grow. On the Sacro Montes stage Gaudenzio is forced to play far too distinctive a role in the fight between realism and abstraction as well as between the dialect of the periphery and the language of the centre as later formulated by Enrico Castelnuovo and Carlo Ginzburg.[vi]泭Here, as scholars have already shown, Testori pursues his own 1960s ideological agenda, attaching our own times historiographical urgencies onto Gaudenzios history.[vii]泭The editorial work, which is valuable and accurate, shows to what extent the book was a milestone in Gaudenzio studies. However, fifty years later, the case-by-case survey of attributional results could have been paired with a thorough appraisal of Testoris methodological conduct; and with some bibliographical references to research dealing with the Sacro Monte from different perspectives, such as David Freedbergs.[viii]泭Giovanni Agosti has shown the many ways the present can profitably blur into the past; to which end, interpretation needs to be balanced by as much philological attention as methodological self-awareness both lacking in Testoris book.[ix]泭In fact, some forthcoming research will hopefully channel the overwhelming amount of research on Gaudenzio into one exhaustive monograph or exhibition, which may meet modern scholarly demands, making use of a convenient form while exposing its ideological underpinnings.

Citations

[i]泭Franz Kugler,泭Handbook of Painting, Austen Henry Layard ed. (London: Murray, 1887), 426.

[ii]泭Giovanni Testori,泭Il Gran Teatro Montano. Saggi su Gaudenzio Ferrari泭(Milan: Feltrinelli, 1965); Samuel Butler,泭Ex Voto: An account of the Sacro Monte at Varallo-Sesia泭(London: Tr羹bner, 1888); Ethel Halsey,泭Gaudenzio Ferrari泭(London: G. Bell & Sons, 1904).

[iii]泭Anna Maria Brizio, et al.,泭Mostra di Gaudenzio Ferrari泭(Milan: Silvana, 1956).

[iv]泭Giovanni Testori, Il Gran Teatro Montano: Saggi su Gaudenzio Ferrari, in Giovanni Testori,泭La realtdella pittura: Scritti di storia e critica darte dal Quattrocento al Settecento, Pietro Cesare Marani, ed. (Milan: Longanesi & C., 1995), 3191; Giovanni Testori,泭Il Gran Teatro Montano: Saggi su Gaudenzio Ferrari泭(Milan: Medusa, 2010).

[v]泭Alberto Durio,泭Il Santuario di Varallo: secondo uno sconosciuto cimelio bibliografico del 1514泭(Novara: Tip. E. Cattaneo, 1926).

[vi]泭Enrico Castelnuovo and Carlo Ginzburg, Centro e periferia, in Giovanni Previtali, ed.,泭Storia dellArte Italiana, vol. I.,泭Questioni e metodi泭(Turin: G. Einaudi, 1979), 283352.

[vii]泭Paolo Venturoli, Le statue in legno e in terracotta della Cappella della Crocifissione e il problema di Gaudenzio scultore, in Elena De Filippis, ed.,泭Gaudenzio Ferrari. La Crocifissione del Sacro Monte di Varallo泭(Turin, Allemandi, 2006), 3556.

[viii]泭David Freedberg,泭The Power of Images: Studies in the History and Theory of Response泭(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989), 192245.

[ix]泭See Giovanni Agosti,泭Su Mantegna. I, La storia dellarte libera la testa泭(Milan: Feltrinelli, 2005).

 

 

Citations