Renaissance Siena Exhibition
Yesterday we went to see the “Renaissance Siena” exhibition at the National Gallery, London.
It was a marvellous exhibition of art from a city which always to some extent saw itself as set apart from the rest of the world. I won’t write about the way in which Siena was saved from disaster many times by the intervention of the Blessed Virgin - the latest being during World War II. But I do want to mention one thing which struck me very forcibly. In the first half of the exhibition, the Sienese artists depicted the Virgin and other saints as though they believed in them and wanted to honour and glorify them by their art. Then quite suddenly there seemed to be a change of style and to me it was as if the artists were depicting the Virgin and the saints as just another set of subjects for their Art. In other words it was the Art that had become important rather than the saints. Perhaps it’s only coincidence that this was rapidly followed by the loss of the city’s independence and influence.


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