Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Friday, January 9, 2015
Rome Journal V: The Sacred and the Profound
photograph of Stefano Maderno’s St Cecilia by Hallie Cohen
The Marquis de Sade had a thing for Santa Cecilia in
Trastevere.It’s not surprising since it
houses the famous sculpture of the writhing Saint whichStefano Maderno claimed to have
wrested right from her preserved form when her burying place was examined in1599. Even
Sade couldn’t have invented the tortures Cecilia endured. But Sade wasn’t very
far off at least as far as a true understanding of Roman life is concerned.
Profanity is never far from profundity. It’s something that you discover
quickly in exploring the imagination of the great Italian filmmaker Pier Palo
Pasolini who was as immersed in both the highest and lowest strivings of the
human spirit. Despite the director’s Marxist credentials,The Gospel According to Saint Matthew is a deeply Christian work, and the last movie of his career
Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom based on De Sade’s 120 of Sodom, takes place in a palace presided over by fascists, where
the famed words over Dante’s entrance to hell, “lasciate ogni speranza voi ch’entrata,” apply. Salo is brilliant essay in perversion that often has
filmgoers searching for the “uscita," which is exit in Italian. On the other
side of the Tiber from Trastevere, you will find the old Jewish quarter of
Rome. Pasolini occupied an apartment on the Piazza Costaguti right down from
the Piazza Mattei, where he often went to see one of Rome’s great hidden
treasures, the Fontana Delle Tartarughe, where statues of naked adolescent
boys, whose penises were actually hidden by leaves during a period of
repression in the 1850’s, are topped with four turtles. The fountain also appears
in The Talented Mr. Ripley, (1999) Anthony Minghella’s adaptation of the
Patricia Highsmith novel.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.