The Reporter (Vacaville)

Rome churches beckon with art and no ‘hordes’

- By Beatrice Larco

ROME >> Like elsewhere in Europe, museums and art galleries closed in Italy in the spring and again in the fall to contain the spread of COVID-19, leaving virtual tours as the best option for art lovers who wanted to see the treasures held by institutio­ns such as the Uffizi Galleries in Florence and the Vatican Museums in Rome.

But some exquisite pieces of Italy’s cultural heritage remain on display for inperson viewing inside the country’s churches, which stayed open during the autumn resurgence of the virus. Some churches hold collection­s of Renaissanc­e art and iconograph­y that would be the envy of any museum.

Residents of Rome — and, in a normal year, tourists — can admire masterpiec­es by Michelange­lo and Caravaggio in the city’s lavish cathedrals and churches.

“Emotions and sensations experience­d upon entering are no less than those experience­d upon entering museums,” said art historian Benedetta Mazzanobil­e, who gives tours of the artwork inside Roman churches in French, Spanish and Portuguese.

San Luigi dei Francesi, the French community church in Rome, has three majestic works by 16th century painter Michelange­lo Merisi, known as Caravaggio. Visitors who deposit a coin to illuminate the church’s Contarelli Chapel can enjoy the paintings, centered around the life of St. Matthew.

Two other Caravaggio paintings, depicting the crucifixio­n of St. Peter and the conversion of St. Paul on the way to Damascus, can be admired in the Santa Maria del Popolo church together with “The Assumption of the Virgin,” by Annibale Carracci.

Works by another Renaissanc­e master, Raphael, can be found in several churches in Rome, including Santa Maria della Pace. That’s where the artist painted “Sybils,” a fresco also known as “Sybils receiving instructio­n from Angels,” starting around 1514.

The pandemic interfered with plans to mark the 500th anniversar­y of Raphael’s death. In Rome, the largest Raphael exhibition opened in March and closed three days later when the Italian government ordered a nationwide lockdown. The exhibit reopened in June as restrictio­ns were lifted and ran until the end of summer.

A work of art in its own right the Vatican’s St. Peter’s Basilica is packed with masterpiec­es, including Michelango’s “Pieta,” a touching sculpture of the Virgin Mary holding the dead body of Christ.

The Santa Maria della Vittoria church has a less known but power fully evocative marble sculpture by Baroque architect and sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini, “The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa.”

That Italian church-goers now can admire art without having to compete with the usual throngs of tourists is a mixed blessing, Mazzanobil­e said.

“Surely the pandemic has allowed us to reflect on the hordes of tourists who would be now invading, sometimes in an unworthy way, the streets and galleries of museums,” she said. “But I certainly believe that, like me, most of the guides and tour leaders are waiting for those hordes.”

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