The Miracle of the Slave
Image source: upload.wikimedia.org

The Miracle of the Slave

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Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Oil Paint
Current Location: the Gallerie dell\'Accademia, Venice
Location History:Commissioned in 1548 for the Scuola Grande di San Marco, this masterpiece hung opposite the building's main altar for two and a half centuries. In 1797, Napoleon's invading French forces looted the canvas, shipping it straight to Paris. It was successfully repatriated to Venice in 1815, where it has remained a centerpiece of the Gallerie dell'Accademia ever since.

Also known as "The Miracle of St. Mark Freeing the Slave", this colossal oil-on-canvas was Tintoretto’s official "drop-the-mic" moment in the Venetian art world. Painted when he was just 30 years old, it caused an absolute scandal and solidified his reputation as a rule-breaker. According to legend, Tintoretto wrote a motto on the wall of his studio that defined his lifelong ambition: "The drafting of Michelangelo, and the colouring of Titian." This painting is the absolute textbook fulfilment of that claim. The massive, naked figure of the slave twisted on the ground is directly lifted from Michelangelo’s muscular, sculptural anatomy, while the shimmering, electric pinks, golds, and deep reds of the garments scream pure Venetian colourism. The sheer kinetic energy of the canvas is unmatched. Traditional High Renaissance art valued stability and balance. Here, Saint Mark (the patron saint of Venice) literally swoops down headfirst out of the sky like a modern superhero breaking through a ceiling. He is painted in radical foreshortening, diving violently toward the ground to shatter the weapons of torture. The dynamic, spiralling circular motion of the shocked crowd completely pulls the viewer into the commotion. The narrative is built exactly like a climactic scene on a theatre stage. A Christian slave has disobeyed his pagan master to worship at St. Mark’s tomb. Just as his executioners try to shatter his legs and gouge out his eyes, Saint Mark arrives, causing the wooden axes and iron mallets to miraculously snap in half. The executioners hold up the broken shards of their tools to the master in absolute bewilderment. It is pure, unadulterated cinematic drama. The piece was commissioned by the ultra-wealthy civic organization, the Scuola Grande di San Marco. However, when Tintoretto unveiled it, the board members were so shocked and deeply divided by its aggressive, frantic style and lack of serene elegance that they originally rejected it and sent it back to his studio. The controversy generated so much public buzz that the Scuola ultimately swallowed their pride, begged for it back, and hung it in its place of honour.

Sources:

Location source: bestveniceguides.it
Location History: en.wikipedia.org
Information Compiled by Mim Afrin
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